New Bookmarks
January 1-June 30, 1999 Additions to Bob Jensen's Bookmarks
Bob Jensen at Trinity University

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For the January 1-June 30, 1999 Additions and Summaries scroll down this document 
For the 1998 Additions and Summaries go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book98.htm
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Choose a Date of 1999 Additions to the Bookmarks File

July 1-December 31, 1999 - http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book99.htm

June 25, 1999               June 18, 1999           June 11, 1999         June 04, 1999

May 28, 1999              May 11, 1999            May 7, 1999

April 30, 1999             April 23, 1999           April 18, 1999         April 9, 1999             April 02, 1999

March 26, 1999          March 19, 1999        March 12, 1999      March 5, 1999

February 26, 1999     February 16, 1999    February 9, 1999     February 2, 1999

January 26, 1999       January 18, 1999      January 11, 1999

 


June 25, 1999


The Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) has a reasonably good free online Education section at
http://www.cboe.com/education/

Interestingly, the Options ToolBox subsection of the above CBOE education system requires the Authorware Reader. I seldom encounter Authorware on the web. For the free Authorware Reader and other Macromedia downloads, click on the Download button at http://www.macromedia.com/ .  I had previously downloaded the Authorware Reader (installs as a plug-in to your browser).  This week I found that the CBOE Educational Options Toobox runs rather efficiently on the Internet.  I especially like the tutorials on Index Options and Long-term Equity Anticipation Securities (LEAPS).  However, I wish that there were sections on derivatives accounting to round out the strategy tutorials.  The Authorware displays are a bit like indexed file card flipping.  You can add your own bookmarks.  In terms of LEAPS popularity, you can read the following at http://www.cboe.com/education/faq.htm :

Since their introduction by the CBOE in 1990, open interest in equity LEAPS at the CBOE has increased to a record 4.6 million contracts by the end of February 1999 (representing over 460 million shares of stock).

At first blush, I would not have advised the CBOE to author the Toolbox materials in Macromedia Authorware.  That seemed to be  analogous to using a Caterpillar Earthmover to level out a sand trap after one of my infamous wedge shots.  Most effects (mainly the hiding and showing of layers) could have been achieved with Macromedia Dreamweaver with less cost and authoring complexity.  Users would not have to download a plug-in reader into their browsers.  Also the files could be found with web search engines (this is not possible for Authorware files on the web).  I suspect that the CBOE may have authored these files for other purposes such as training courses where Authorware's complete course management system would be helpful.

Later on, when I got into the section on LEAPS Strategies for Stock Investors, I discovered why Authorware made more sense.  The coordination of the graphics with alternative LEAPS strategies would be messy to author in Dreamweaver.  This is a piece of cake, however, in Authorware or ToolBook.  There are just some things that high-end authoring software can do better with less effort provided you endure the initial learning curve.  For more on high-end authoring see the ending half of http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245soft1.htm .

Here's the bottom line.  For those of us teaching SFAS 133 on how to account for complex derivative financial instruments contracts, it appears that there are possible student projects using this CBOE education web site.  Student teams could be assigned to study alternative contracts and alternative investment strategies (including hedges of hypothetical lending or investing transactions).  Students could be required to explain how the strategies work and how the contracts would be accounted for under SFAS 133 under various hedging scenarios.  I returned a few former student project web sites to the server to demonstrate this idea, although at the time my students did not have these CBOE tutorials.  See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/busn2311/students.htm .  Perhaps I will assign similar projects using the CBOE tutorials the next time I teach the ACCT 5341 course.


Wake Forest University is pushing campus-wide Macromedia Dreamweaver authoring. You can read about it in an article entitled "Students Weave Web Authoring Dreams at Wake Forest," T.H.E. Journal, June 1999, pg. 8.  This news update also appears at http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/current/news.asp . I use Dreamweaver for certain things, but I still find MS Frontpage to be easier to use for workhorse HTML when I don't need DHTML dynamics.  MS Frontpage 2000 is discussed at http://www.microsoft.com/catalog/display.asp?site=768&subid=22&pg=1 . I have not yet installed Frontpage 2000, but when I do it will allow me to do DHTML authoring without having to shift into Dreamweaver.  Most campuses should take a good look at FrontPage 2000 before following Wake Forest's lead.


I just received a snail mail copy of a CD-ROM called CODIS.  This is a searchable CD containing abstracts and sample copies of management case studies from the largest single source of case materials in the world.  The address and other information is as follows:

ECCH at Babson Ltd (for communications from North and South America only)
Babson College, Babson Park, MA 02457
Voice (781) 239-5884  Fax (781) 239-5885
I cannot find a web site for this brach of the ECCH

From other parts of the world you may obtain ECCH products from http://www.ecch.cranfield.ac.uk/

Does anybody know if there is a better headquarters web site for ECCH?  If a lot of the CODIS material was put up at a web site, it would be easier to keep it up to date with latest materials.


I have created a new document called "XML and RDF Watch" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm
Please send me interesting updates that you hear about to help me keep this "Watch" up to date.  My email address is rjensen@trinity.edu .

The above "watch" would become so much better if others joined me in an effort to modify and update the above document at their own web sites.   For example, some accountants might take it in the direction of accounting applications, some librarians might take it in the direction of library applications, some computer scientists might take it in directions the rest of us cannot read, some scientists might take us in the direction of science applications, etc.  I would love to provide links to selected extensions in the names of the persons who would like to carry on this effort that I began at  http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/xmlrdf.htm (only in the startup phase at the moment).  We need all the help we can get "watching" important happenings in XML and RDF.

The above ideas are not entirely original, although I do not know of any such collaborative efforts in academic "watch" writing.  There  is an "Interesting Stories Forum" at http://www.computer-stall.com/storiesforum/ .  (I have not had time to check out the quality of the stories). 


Search Service for the Best Book Purchase Deal
Probably the best known online bookstores are Amazon at http://www.amazon.com and Barnes and Noble at
http://www.bn.com .  The Powells book seller claims to be the largest new and used bookstore in the world at http://www.powells.com/ .  But there are other online bookstores. 

A free comparison guide that will find you the best deal among various bookstores is provided by Glenn Fleishman.    You can search even faster by typing the ISBN number following the "nu/" in the URL address. However, I do not recommend that you do this since it will take you directly to only one book seller (Amazon).  Instead I recommend that you do the following:

Alternately, you can also select a particular book seller in the drop box below the ISBN entry field.  This does not give you a table of comparison prices like you get with the "Compare" button.

Out-of-Print books can be searched for by title from http://www.outofprint.com/ .  After sending an inquiry about whether this search service used XML markups, Joe Williams reported that XML was not used in the OutOfPrint comparison guides.


Before starting this section, let me relate a short news item.  According to a San Antonio TV report a few years ago, an employee in a local Best Buy department store discovered a reporter walking down the isles recording Best Buy prices and product model numbers.  The reporter was promptly escorted out of the store due to an alleged Best Buy policy of not allowing store prices to be recorded for comparison shopping guides.  The bottom line is that most vendors do not like to make it easy to compare prices.

The first XML book price comparison service was the Junglee Shopping Guide according to The XML Handbook by Charles F. Goldfarb and Paul Prescod (ISBN 0130811521, Prentice-Hall Computer Books, 1998, Chapter 9).   However,  doing so was not easy since XML markups are not provided by book sellers.  Junglee used "extractors" to automatically extract prices from unstructured (non-XML) text.  (For definitions of terms like "extractor" and "wrapper," see my Technology Glossary.)  

In any case, Junglee Shopping Guide is now part of Amazon.  You can shop for a variety of products in this added service from Amazon, but I could not find how to shop for the best deal on books. I wonder why Amazon dropped price comparison guides for books after acquiring the Junglee Shopping Guide!

If book sellers put current prices and handling/shipping charges into XML markups for each ISBN number, it would be possible to easily compare prices for hundreds of book sellers.  If such metadata were available in vendor XML markups, the wonderful book comparison shopping guide provided by Glenn Fleishman at http://isbn.nu/ could more easily extract comparitive prices for hundreds of book sellers instead of the 17 book sellers that he now scans as a public service without having the benefit of XML tags. 

The following message (from Glenn Fleishman) not only highlights a special problem that XML enthusiasts will have in providing shopping comparison guides, it possibly touches upon a business ethics issue as well.  We seem to be approaching a classic dilemma of where the only way to make it easier to comparison shop will be for the government to require firms to make it easier to obtain the necessary data.

Hi Dr. Jensen,
No XML here, unfortunately. It’s not necessarily in the interests of an online bookstore to provide XML tags on their data, as an easier comparison of their prices does not necessarily help stores sell their books
.

I am very excited about XML, but I believe it will wind up being used primarily in business-to-business partnership applications and in applications that replace proprietary EDI systems.

It will also be an amazing tool for transferring information from hetergenous data sources that will far, far surpass the awful tab-delimited text file format.

Glenn Fleishman [glenn@glenns.org]

As pointed out in the previous section, Fleishman's excellent ISBN book shopping comparison guide is at http://isbn.nu/ . Although I like this guide as a book consumer, I worry that such guides tend to reduce standardized products to commodity-priced items.  This, in turn, may stifle innovations that add to vendor overheads and may reduce longer-term capital spending for improved services.   I suspect that somewhat higher book prices helped Amazon invest heavily into innovative web research and development.  If Amazon is forced to meet the lowest prices on the web, Amazon will most likely do less and less in the way of leading the world in web site innovations.

Note that it is possible to generate XML markups (e.g., for consumer guides) even though the vendor web sites do not have XML tags.  See the definition of wrapper and extractor at http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Wrapper .


In the faculty club, a recent discussion turned to how a web site can sell a standardized product (like a popular textbook) and still achieve a premium price when web comparison guides might otherwise lead consumers to the lowest pricing vendor. One way that I pointed out is to provide an added service that the lower-priced competition does not provide.  For example, I mentioned that the vendor of textbooks might provide online testing and grading.  For example, Cybertext administers weekly quizzes to my AIS students who are made to purchase access to the textbook at http://www.cybertext.com .  Another company called Cyberclass provides similar services and web space for customized quizzes and chat rooms at http://www.hgcorp.com/cyberclass/ .  With some types of service, the vendors may be able to give the book away and charge for the accompanying service.

CPA audits run the risk of becomming priced as commodities unless auditors can demonstrate premium services.  The CPA Auction web site reflects the trend for commodity pricing of CPA services in general.  My comments on the CPA Auction are relegated to the bottom of this June 25 update (I'm hoping that you will grow weary of reading this before you reach the bad stuff at the end.)


This is a great web site.
Web tools, including tools for Browsers;  HTML, XML, & CSS;  Graphics & Design; Multimedia;  DHTML & JavaScript;  Java; Servers & E-Commerce;  Scripting;  Demo.
.http://www.webtools.com/

A good web site to follow for XML software updates is the Web Tools site at http://www.webtools.com/toolbox/html .

From MIT - The Journal of Markup Languages ($50 per year)
http://mitpress.mit.edu/journal-home.tcl?issn=10996621


Although vendors may not willingly provide any XML markups that make it easier to conduct competitive comparisons on most anything (prices, quality, ingredients, consumer complaints, reliability tests, etc.), there are areas where industry or government regulations already require public disclosures.  Those disclosures are subject to XML markups for ease of comparison.  Great examples are the required accounting disclosures required by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for the EDGAR database.  These disclosures fit into an EDGAR Document Type Definition (DTD) published at the SEC web site.  Each submission document to the SEC from registrants required to file financial data with the SEC is supposed to conform to the SEC DTD.   The EDGAR Filer Manual can be downloaded from http://www.sec.gov/asec/ofis/filerman.htm .  The Appendices are quite interesting.  They are as follows:

APPENDICES to EDGAR Filer Manual:

A  Form Types Accepted for Electronic Filing This appendix lists the form types that EDGAR accepts and the EDGAR Submission Header type names given to each SEC form. It also provides a page reference to Appendix B, where we provide the tags appropriate for each submission header type.

B  EDGAR Tags by Submission Header Type In this appendix we provide the EDGAR tags appropriate for each submission header. Please note that we have added new tags within the General Tags section which apply to all form types.

C  Acceptable Values for Paper Forms for Electronic Filing The EDGAR system recognizes a limited set of values for certain tags. This appendix lists the values you must provide in a specified format.

D  Messages Reported by EDGAR This appendix includes information to assist you in understanding the acceptance and suspension messages that EDGAR generates.

E   Tagging for Financial Data Schedules This appendix provides information on EDGAR requirements for Financial Data Schedules processed by our Divisions of Corporation Finance and Investment Management. Financial Data Schedules require specific EDGAR tags; this appendix includes the correct format for input of tags and data by Article type.

F  Paper Forms for Electronic Filing Form ID Uniform Application for Access Codes to File on EDGAR Form SE Form for Submission of Paper Format Exhibits by Electronic Filers Form ET Transmittal Form for Electronic Format Documents Under the EDGAR System Form TH Notification of Reliance on Temporary Hardship Exemption

G  Glossary of Commonly Used Terms, Acronyms, and Abbreviations

H  Form 13-F Special Electronic Filing Instructions

I  EDGARLink[R] Script Language

J  Instructions for Attaching HTML Documents to Electronic Filings This new appendix provides information to assist you in creating SEC-acceptable HTML documents. This appendix provides the allowed HTML tags and disallowed HTML attributes for specific HTML tags. This appendix also includes all new HTML/PDF error messages.

K  Instructions for Attaching Unofficial PDF Documents to Electronic Filings This new appendix provides information to help you create and attach SEC-acceptable PDF documents.

In addition to the SEC DTD, extensive rules and regulations of the SEC dictate what financial data are to filed with the SEC (e.g., a complete 10-K annual set of audited financial statements).  The required submission data and the DTD facilitate using XML for filing and retrieving EDGAR data.  In 1998, an entire chapter is devoted to XML submissions to the SEC in The XML Handbook by Charles F. Goldfarb and Paul Prescod (ISBN 0130811521, Prentice-Hall Computer Books, 1998, Chapter 11).  These ideas are elaborated upon in a 1999 paper entitled "The Electronic Dissemination of Accounting Information - Resource Discovery, Processing, and Analysis" by Roger Debreceny, Glen Gray, and Tony Barry.  I recommend that all of you contact one of these authors for a copy. In particular you may request a copy from Glen at glen.gray@csun.edu  or Roger at rogerd@netbox.com .


I have been playing a little more with Version 4 of Adobe Acrobat.   The most common way to generate an Acrobat PDF file is to create a document in a word processor (say a DOC file) or a spreadsheet (say a XLS file).  With Adobe Exchange installed, you can simply save a second copy of the document as a PDF file.   In the past, I pretended there was a glass barrier in which the original images were behind the glass (and could not be modified with Adobe Exchange) versus Acrobat Exchage things that you could do in front of the glass (such as add annotations, hyperlinks, bookmarks, audio, video, etc.).  Prior to Version 4, any changes in content of the file behind the glass could not be made using Adobe Exchange.  Version 4, however, allows certain types of changes such as "touching up" words, insertion of pages, and renumbering of pages.  However, most serious modifying and editing of text or data are still best accomplished by returning to the word processor or spreadsheet program.  For example, if I added text in a sentence I could not get the longer sentence to easily wrap around and adjust the lines for the added text.  Have any of you found a way to make such text wrappings automatic in PDF text editing?

Version 4 of Adobe Acrobat (particularly the Adobe Exchange module) certainly makes it easier to publish web documents in PDF form rather than HTML or some other DTD.  Version 4 is a significant upgrade.  The main advantage is that the original document produced on a word processor or spreadsheet program does not have to be edited and touched up in the same manner that an HTML conversion often requires fixing up.  For exampl, MS Word tables and Excel tables do not have to be fixed up in a PDF file, but these tables almost always have to be fixed up following a conversion to a HTM file.  Images do not have to be stored in separate files like they do for HTML documents.  Another advantage arises in that the hard copy printout of the PDF file is nearly perfect in terms of looking just like the original DOC or XLS printout. 

But there is one huge disadvantage of a PDF document on the web that is often overlooked. That disadvantage is that a PDF document cannot be scanned by web search engines such as Altavista, HotBot, and Lycos.  If authors want to have their work picked up by search engines, one possibilty is to publish a summary of the PDF document in a separate HTML document.  Include lots of key words and text in the HTML document that will motivate users to click on the hyperlink to the PDF file.

Adding (limited) text editing capabilities will not be viewed happily by all authors.  For example, PDF files are often the files of choice by corporations issuing annual reports.  A main reason is that they print so nicely from PDF files.   Another reason in the past, however, was that users could not modify the text in a PDF file.  With Version 4 of Acrobat Exchange, however, readers can change text, insert pages, import other PDF files, repaginate, etc.  PDF authoring no longer comforts authors that posted documents remain "Pretty Decidedly Fixed" after they are downloaded by users.  Even though editing in Adobe Exchange is still far more limited than HTML editors, it is now possible to edit PDF documents.

Heavy duty acrobat authors may want to purchase an add-on product called Compose from Software Partners, Inc at http://www.ambia.com/compose/ .


Thank you Andrew Priest and Andy Lymer
Accounting Journals Index
http://www.accountingeducation.com/journals/index.cfm


Thank you Dennis Schmidt
Tax and Accounting Sites Directory
http://www.taxsites.com/


Howard Schilit wrote a (1993) book called "Financial Shenanigans: How To Detect Accounting Gimmicks & Fraud in Financial Reports".  He has since opened a web site at  http://www.cfra-online.com/ .  You can compare prices on his book at by entering the ISBN number 0070561311 at http://isbn.nu/ .


From Infobits:  Survey of Distance Education Programs
According to a recent study published by Primary Research Group, Inc., an estimated 93 percent of distance learning (DL) programs in North American colleges and universities use email as their DL medium. The study, "The Survey of Distance Learning Programs in Higher Education," is based on a random sample of sixty-one college and university distance learning programs throughout the United States and Canada. The report provides a comparison of data reported in 1997 and 1998. Findings show that 36.68 percent of DL instructors in 1998 were adjunct faculty, compared with 1997 in which 27.34 percent of the instructors were adjunct faculty. Instructor/tutor salaries account for the highest percentage of the DL programs' total costs and expenditures -- 31.72 percent. In 1997, instructor/tutor salaries accounted for 37.21 percent of the total costs and expenditures. Other findings of the study include: · 86.96 percent of the programs operate at a profit, while 13.04 percent operate at a profit of greater than 50 percent. · Thirteen percent of the programs in public colleges and twenty-seven percent of the programs in private colleges have created new courses for DL, rather than reusing and retooling traditional courses for the DL programs.

The table of contents for "The Survey of Distance Learning Programs in Higher Education, 1999 Edition" is available online at http://www.primaryresearch.com/distanc2.htm   .   The full report costs $87.50, or $139.75 for both 1998 and 1999 Editions. Contact Gary Boas at 212-764-1579 to place an order.
The Primary Research Group home page is at http://www.primaryresearch.com/ .


From the Scout Report
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/

This new current awareness resource from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School offers "the latest business insights, information and research" on a bi-weekly basis including "interviews with industry leaders and Wharton faculty, articles based on the most recent business research, book reviews, conference and seminar reports," among other sources. The Knowledge@Wharton site is divided into subject sections ranging from finance and investment to business ethics; each topical page includes searchable layers of information in summary, short article, or academic paper formats. Note: registration is required for access.


From InformationWeek Online (the shrinking of "accounting" in accounting firms)
Qwest Communications International Inc. And KPMG LLP are forming Qwest Cyber.Solutions LLC, a joint venture to provide Internet-based end-to-end application-service-provider, application-hosting, and application-management services, including enterprise resource planning, customer relationship management, and back-office offerings.

The partners will start out with $400 million in current contracts, providing a base to compete in the global market for applications management, which analysts estimate will grow to $25 billion by 2001. The venture is a facilities-based applications service provider with assets of more than $120 million and 450 certified applications specialists.


On Page 11 of the June 28, 1999 issue of Newsweek, a search engine focused on 4 million federal government web pages is described.  See http://standard.northernlight.com/cgi-bin/govsearch_login.pl .


PC Week information technology news webcasts
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/webcast/

The live keynote is at http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/webcast/pcexpo99.html .

Web versus TV Wars --- Marc Andreessen's keynote address at the PC Expo
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/webcast/pcexpo99.html


Just for you John McCusker

100 Events That Shaped a Century
http://www.thestreet.com/basics/countdown/748433.html

The Basics of Business History
http://www.thestreet.com/basics/countdown/748433.html

Also see the Museum of American Financial History
http://www.financialhistory.org/


For you John Howland
sourceXchange - marketplace for open source development.
http://www.sourcexchange.com/


From John Howland - Robert Metcalf's regular updates on the future of networking and computing
http://www.infoworld.com/articles/op/xml/990621opmetcalfe.xml   (Note the
XML extension at the end of the URL.)

The main InfoWorld web site is at http://www.infoworld.com/ .  There is a subject index link on the main page.  I requested both the free hardcopy and electronic editions.


I love my Quick View Plus as a way of opening Word and Excel files that people send me without running the risk of starting a Windows macro virus (even when you copy or print from the file).  You can download a free trial version and give it a test run.
http://www.jasc.com/qvp.html


Lycos has 8,000 databases that are only a few clicks away
http://dir.lycos.com/Reference/Searchable_Databases/


Guides to using a financial calculator without having to be confused by the manual
http://moon.pepperdine.edu/~mkinsman/Using.html


Guides from the SEC about calculating the cost of a mutual fund
http://www.sec.gov/mfcc/mfcc-int.htm


I ordered an automatic TV sound controller at http://www.igadget.com/igadget/auttvsounreg.html


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week's featured ACE professor is my friend J. Efrim Boritz
Institution: University of Waterloo
Course Title: Information System Control and Audit
Textbook: Computer Control and Audit Guide
Author(s): J. E. Boritz
Efrim provides us with book readings and project assignments.  Note that this is an online course.  Thank you for sharing Efrim.


Digital Camera Guide.
http://cgi.zdnet.com/slink?3219


Guides to helping the environment
http://es.epa.gov/


Patterns in Mathematics - an interactive lab where children can explore logic patterns, number patterns, and word patterns. http://www.learner.org/teacherslab/math/patterns/index.html


VAGUEPolitix Satire from PBS
http://www.pbs.org/weblab/vaguepolitix/


News from or about Microsoft Corporation

The hidden failures to expect from Windows 2000 (Bad News for All of Us!)
http://www.zdnet.com/anchordesk/story/story_3505.html

Exploring the Tri-Pane View in Microsoft PowerPoint 2000
http://www.microsoft.com/insider/powerpoint2000/articles/tripane.htm

New Initiative Helps Kids Stay Safe Online
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/06-16kids.htm

Microsoft’s TV Platform Makes Broadband Services a Reality
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/06-14ncta.htm


Penn State University's World Campus 101
http://www.worldcampus.psu.edu:8900/public/wc101/


Charles A. Dice Center for Research in Financial Economics
http://www.cob.ohio-state.edu/~fin/dice/index.htm


If you know a product name and want to find what company makes that product or vice versa, you might triy http://www.realnames.com .   Web site URLs are also provided.  I typed in "Authorware" and was taken directly to the Authorware product section at the Macromedia web site. 

Note that the above search site is quite handy for finding home pages of colleges and universities.


How to design pages that are better for sight impaired users
http://www.useit.com/alertbox/990613.html


For career women
http://client.lycos.com/r.asp?CB&EMB/6RkZ6.ldc929567692


Here is some recent information on assessment of learning. This article does not deal with accounting. Rather it focuses more IT training. However, it is very current and seems to be somewhat better than the bulk of the short articles on assessment that I stumble upon. The title is "Training Developers More Efficiently," Information Week, June 14, 1999, 1A-10A. The online version is at http://www.informationweek.com/738/38addev.htm .

The bottom line conclusion is that "the manner in which information is presented is as important as the information itself, so using the latest technology and best practices is key."

The article points out that trainers and educators often do not evaluate vendors and courseware adequately. I think this is especially true for educators who adopt a particular textbook and then simply "take" whatever technology products come with the book (e.g., PowerPoint slides or a simulation game).

Another point raised in the article is as follows: "Though students may say that exercises are boring, drills are important to long-term learning." I think in our efforts to stay "mod" with team projects, group learning, discovery learning, etc., we sometimes forget the importance of drill.

There is a nice section in the article on self-study versus classroom learning.

There are other sections, including a section on costs. That section is very situational and cannot be generalized very far.


In his Personal Technology column for the Wall Street Journal, Walter Mossberg has never written a more glowing account of any product than he wrote for the new Packard Bell Z1 on June 17, 1999.  Among other things, the Z1 does two things that I have preached about for years to no avail about improving a PC.  Firstly, PCs should have an Ethernet port as standard network connecting equipment.  Second, PCs should have one of more  PCMCIA slots for better communication with laptop computers, digital camera disks, etc.  You can read the following at http://www.ptech.wsj.com/ptech.html .

The most innovative aspect of the Z1 is its expandability. There are no internal slots for adding new circuitry, which most users shun anyway. Instead, there are four of the new, simpler USB connectors -- twice the industry norm. It also includes a PC card socket, typically found only on laptops, that makes it easy to pop in the memory cards found on digital cameras.

There's also a built-in Ethernet networking port, for hooking up cable modems. Memory can be expanded by just opening a little door on the back. And there are the standard serial and printer ports, as well as a port for connecting a second monitor.

And you can use the keyboard from across the room since there are no cords to connect for a keyboard or a mouse.  Owners of a Z1 will have far less need for hardware technicians.  An additional hard drive beyond the standard 8.4 Gb hard drive can be popped into a slot in a matter of seconds.  The flat-screen monitor can be removed without tools and swapped for alternative sizes.  And there are many other new features that make the Z1 a "head turner."  Gateway also introduced a flat-screen model, but the Packard Bell Z1 is a far more heavy duty and innovative computer, including a radically different size and shape.  Where is the innovation in the Top Guns like Dell and Compaq?  I suspect they've been slower on the holster draw than Packard Bell --- or to mix a metaphor, they've been hit in the head by David's sling shot.  The Packard Bell home page is at http://www.packardbell.com/ .


From PC Week
Java 2 Micro Edition: It could lead to the creation of technology that makes the world smarter.
http://www.pcweek.com/b/pcwt9906166/1015109/

PLUS—ZDNet’s Software Library has the Java downloads you need, for free! Check out the selection at http://www.zdnet.com/swlib/develop/java.html


Take bytes out of your cookies with this tip from ZD Tips
Using Windows Explorer, navigate to your SendTo menu. Add the MS-DOS Editor to your SendTo menu. SentTo is an option on the drop-down menu that opens when you right click on any file, folder, etc.

Once the MS-DOS Editor has been added to your SendTo options, click on Start, Find, Files or Folders. In the dialog box "Named," type "cookies.txt" (without the parentheses). Be sure the "Look in" box has your hard drive, e.g., (C:), and not any subdirectories in it.

This will locate the file, "cookies.txt" in the Netscape Directory Folder. You could also navigate to the file but this is faster. Right click on "cookies.txt" and select Send To MS-DOS Editor. The file will open. You will see a line telling you not to edit this file. As long as you know how to use Edit you can safely delete any cookie lines you want to be rid of. Save the file and exit back to Windows.


From Neil Hannon
Welcome to the latest edition of the Internet Essentials ‘99 Newsletter for the financial professional.

http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html

Here are this week’s hot topics:

1. Garage.com, where start-ups go to start up
2. Finally, Room on you Desktop
3. Shipping Headquarters @ iShip.com
4. Free the Accountants!
5. Y2K help for Auditors
6. RosettaNet: Establishing standards for eBusiness
7. Case Silicone, Net Detective
8. Quick Hitters; including 21 Strategies for Accountants

To read about the above items, you gotta go to the newsletter:  http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html


I put this last because last is where it belongs.  Thanks but no thanks Barry.  Like you, I am less than impressed.

We've always known that you can buy some professionals (lawyers, expert witnesses,  jockeys, senators, athletes, the Olympics Board, evangelists, accounting professors, etc.), but how low can you get when you can buy your CPA auditor online at an auction. See http://www.cpaauction.com .



And that's the way it was on June 25, 1999. 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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June 18, 1999

Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on June 18, 1999
Bob Jensen at Trinity University

You can change the viewing size of fonts by clicking on the View menu item in your browser.


Do you suppose this will set a new research trend on the web?  It is possible for you to win a Nobel Prize in Science.  You can download and analyze radio telescope analysis software and data. Scientists are giving everyone an opportunity to be the first to discover intelligent life far from Mother Earth.  See  http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/


I have updated Working Paper 260 with the following text about XML software (the wave of the tidal future for e-commerce and the web in general).  Note that my bottom-line actions are to start to play with a free download of Microsoft Corporation's XML Notepad, and to anxiously await for my shipment of Soft Quad's Version 1.0 of XMetaL.

For a time, not much was out there in the way of authoring software for XML and the standards have not yet been fully established to be embedded in web browser software.   However, some business firms are already experimenting with XML.  One piece of software that already has an XML backbone is the Dynabase from INSO (800-733-5799) at http://www.inso.com/Dynabase can be built on top of such relational database systems as Oracle, Sybase, Informix, SQL Server, and DB2.  (It should be pointed out, however, that XML will eventually be an object-oriented database system).  Dynabase uses a proprietary programming language that is very close to Visual Basic and will, therefore, integrate well with Microsoft's Office 2000 products.  It is a bit early for poor professors to start experimenting with Dynabase since it carries a price tag of $50,000.  But Dynabase is already on the move in the corporate world.

A leading company for heavy duty SGML and XML development is ArborText at http://www.arbortext.com/ .  ArborText produces a new software product called EPIC described as follows:

Because Epic connects directly to Microsoft Word, you can easily import existing product information contained in Word files and convert them to valid XML. Epic can also use Word’s filters to import product information contained in other formats including Microsoft Excel tables, WordPerfect files, and more.  After the import is finished, Epic helps you fix up anything that does not convert to valid XML.   In addition to a traditional editing view, Epic also displays the document in an editable, hierarchical view through its Document Map.  In addition, Epic contains several tools that simplify the structured XML authoring process. One example is the Insert Element panel on the right. This allows authors to find the appropriate element by first selecting a category; in this example, the author has selected the "List" category and can then choose from all the types of lists that Epic supports.

In addition, ArborText has the The ADEPT Series described at http://www.arbortext.com/Products/ADEPT_Series/adept_series.html

ADEPT Series -- Supports XML and SGML authoring and page publishing on Windows-based PCs and UNIX-based workstations. ADEPT·Editor -- Allows authors to write text, place graphics and create books, manuals, catalogs, encyclopedias, and similar types of information. Also, ADEPT’s Willow technology enables tight integration between ADEPT and document management systems. ADEPT·Publisher -- Includes all the capabilities of ADEPT·Editor plus page composition. ADEPT·Publisher automatically lays out pages by balancing the need for page fullness with the need to keep related elements together to provide a powerful tool for increasing author productivity. Document·Architect – Provides an application development tool to build DTDs (Document Type Definitions), design stylesheets, and and customize the behavior of ADEPT.

Pricing at ArborText appears to be negotiated, and it does not appear possible to find ballpark pricing at the company's web site.  It appears that ArborText software is not priced for poor professors.

Microsoft has a free download of XML Notepad in beta form that will perform some simple XML basics.  It is described at http://msdn.microsoft.com/xml/NOTEPAD/intro.asp .  Frequently asked questions about XML Notepad are answered at http://msdn.microsoft.com/xml/NOTEPAD/faq.asp .  I downloaded a free copy from http://msdn.microsoft.com/xml/NOTEPAD/download.asp
Microsoft Corporation's dedication to great new things in XML is described at http://www.gca.org/memonly/xmlfiles/issue4/edit.htm
Both Internet Explorer and Netscape have XML viewing capabilities.  See http://www.softseek.com/Internet/Web_Browsers_and_Utilities/Browsers/Review_20326_index.html .  On the heavy duty side of XML, see SQL Server 7.0 and XML Power Microsoft’s Product Catalog http://www.microsoft.com/backstage/

Possibly the best buy in  XML authoring software packages is called XMetaL from the company (Soft Quad) that originated the HTML and web server software called HOT METAL PRO. The price is only $495 for the world and $347 for poor professors (very reasonable for XML authoring). You can read the following in documents at http://www.sq.com/products/XMetaL/index.html

XMetaL is a highly customizable XML authoring tool that delivers unprecedented ease of use to authors while shielding them from the complexities of XML, lowering costs of both customization and deployment.

You can read the initial press release about XMetaL at http://www.sq.com/press/releases/pr990525.html .

Bob Jensen just ordered the XMetaL package --- now you know what I will be doing the rest of the summer.


Hi Bob,

We have also got a deal in principle with The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Australia to be a capstone part of their professional year from mid 2000. This will mean 2500 students from there alone plus the opportunity to go further with corporates.

Thanks for all your help. Many other exciting things happening also which I will be happy to share with you.

Pete Mazany
University of Auckland

Note:  I highly recommend that persons attending the AAA annual meetings in San Diego hear Pete Mazany's exciting presentations.  Pete is so innovative that it is scary. Pete Mazany will be presenting on August 14 CETA CEP Session 1 and the August 15 CEP Session 37 described at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm   .  Other leading-edge innovators will also make multimedia presentations in those sessions. Most of the speakers and topics differ in Session 1 versus Session 37 such that duplication is minimized for persons choosing to attend both workshops. I plan to minimize my presentations in these workshops in order to give more time to the four other speakers in Session 1 and three other speakers in Session 37.


Publisher EdiStone has an interesting web site that makes a different chapter of a full book available for free each month. The book in question is entitled the Basics of Electronic Data Interchange from EdiStone Readers who can pace themselves one chapter per month can go to http://pages.prodigy.com/edibooks/contents.html Readers in a hurry to learn more about EDI will have to buy the book.

Each month, a different chapter is made available to users of the World Wide Web. The List of Topics, List of Figures, background information in the Preface, the Appendices and the Glossary of Terms are always available.   For the Glossary, go to http://pages.prodigy.com/edibooks/edigloss.html .  You can find this and other technology glossaries liked at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm .


If you are looking for some outstanding EDI links and helpers go to the following course web site of Jagdish S. Gangolly:
http://www.albany.edu/faculty/gangolly/acc680/spring99/ (scroll down to Week 5).  Then look at the great helpers for other topics and other weeks (including Week 6 on XML).

Jagdish's Week 6 links led me to an easy-to-read summary document entitled XML for Managers at http://www.arbortext.com/Think_Tank/XML__Resources/XML_for_Managers/xml_for_managers.html


Topical Interest Group:  Assessment in Higher Education
http://marsquadra.tamu.edu/TIG/Forum.html


Congratulations to Tony Catanach and Anita Hollander.  They were the two accounting professors selected among 28 interdisciplinary new Pew Scholars.  This is a great honor and responsibility.   Some of Anita's innovative work will be distributed in the forthcoming Toolkit Project video to be distributed by the American Accounting Association.  You can read about some of Tony's accomplishments in the BAM project described at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/265wp.htm .

You can read more about the Pew Scholars Program at http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/pew_mstr.html . The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching has a web site at http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/welcome.html .  This is a web site that provides information about over 10,000 books, 125 journals, reference collections, and an online database called DIALOG from Lexis*Nexis.

Beverly Harrelson, Communications Coordinator/Webmaster of the American Accounting Association informs be that the Pew Scholar announcement is posted at the following web site:http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/newsarc/pewscholar.htm .  You can read some more about the projects of Anita and Tony at this web site.

The outcomes of the Pew Scholar projects will be available in about one year. We especially are looking forward to the projects of Anita and Tony. Among other things, Pew Scholars must be outstanding educators and assume a leadership role in education within their disciplines. Each year certain disciplines are designated for Pew Foundation awards. This was the year for accounting, management, music, religion, sociology, mathematics, chemistry, and certain other disciplines.


I am impressed with the Digital Duo technology show each week on PBS television.  See http://www.digitalduo.com/ .

Digital Duo is the independent, irreverent video review of all things digital. Every week on Public Television, hosts
Stephen Manes of Forbes Magazine and PC World and Susan Gregory Thomas of U.S. News & World Report
and New Woman cut through the hype and show you how the latest innovations of the electronic age really
work—and how they don't. They bring you the world of digital technology, warts and all—the good, the bad, and
the ugly. They tell you which products to save and which ones to delete, but they're not afraid to disagree. On
every show, contributing editor Walter S. Mossberg of The Wall Street Journal adds his own incisive
commentary about industry trends and issues.

The Digital Duo is the next best thing to Computer Chronicles described at http://www.cmptv.com/computerchronicles/ .


From Phil Livingston, President of the Financial Executives Institute (since this is linked from the Download Archives that anybody can access, I assume that this Excel Workbook is available to the general public)

Acquisition Model - Bruce Valentine, CFO of McStain Homebuilders, and a member of the Rocky Mountain Chapter, contributed a great Excel workbook for pro forma acquisition modeling. It takes the historical and projected results of the seller and buyer and combines them with consideration of the accounting and tax treatments. Thanks so much to Bruce for this great contribution to all FEI members. I’ve known and worked with Bruce and he is a bona fide rocket scientist. 

I believe FEI’s future will contain much more model- and presentation- sharing. Please think about the tools you use or tools you need and send me e-mail if you want to contribute something or are looking for a particular tool. Web-enabled tools for information sharing and analysis should be a priority.

Go to http://www.fei.org/download/dl_index.htm (Then click on MS Excel Acquisition Model. Bruce Valentine)


Teaching Tipster
The Accounting Educator< The Newsletter of the Teaching and Curriculum Section,American Accounting Association
Vol. VIII No. 2 - Spring 1999, http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/tccomm/Spring99/item05.htm


Students For Students --- How to Arrive and Survive in College, get FREE tips from upper-class students about how to thrive in college (the FREE parts seem to be thin in this effort to sell a book)
http://www.students-4-students.com


News from or about Microsoft Corporation

What’s New in Office 2000? Visit TechNet’s Office 2000 Technology Center
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/office/default.htm

Order the Guided Tour for Networking and receive Windows NT Server 4.0 trial software, CD-ROM-based training and case study interviews to help you decide if it’s the right multipurpose operating system for your environment.  ($19.95)
http://www.microsoft.com/go/windowsntserver/default.asp


News from or about Macromedia

Jon DeKeles writes about Dreamweaver 2 in "Make Your HTML Editing Headaches Go Away;" http://www.zdnet.com:80/anchordesk/story/story_3372.html—then scroll to "Dreamweaver".

Dreamweaver 2 pages in order to include robust database connectivity, file input and output, calculations, control actions, dynamic e-mail capabilities, business functions, and many other dynamic features.  Download Tango Objects for Dreamweaver 2, a $49 value, for FREE! --through September 30. Visit: http://www.pervasive.com/products/tango/dreamweaver/

Dreamweaver Support Center
http://www.macromedia.com/support/dreamweaver/

ANNOUNCING Director 7.02:
http://www.macromedia.com/macromedia/proom/pr/1999/index_dir702_announce.fhtml

ANNOUNCING Flash 4:
http://www.macromedia.com/macromedia/proom/pr/1999/index_flash4_announce.fhtml
Also see the Gallery at
http://www.macromedia.com/gallery/


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week's featured ACE professor is Clinton (Skip) White
Institution: University of Delaware
Course Name: Auditing in an IT Environment Textbook: Handbook of IT Auditing
Author(s): Warren, Edelsson, & Parker
http://www.accounting.udel.edu/accounting/white/acct817/syllabus99s.html
Skip shares some very helpful course notes, presentation slides, and a glossary.  You may be especially interested in his risk-based auditing in an IT environment.  Thank you for sharing Skip.


Top 10 most requested services from the U.S. Social Security Administration (note that you can apply for
http://www.ssa.gov/top10.html

You can get a statement of your past earnings and estimated future benefits from
https://s00dace.ssa.gov/pro/batch-pebes/bp-7004home.shtml

The SSA Handbook link is (note that there is a wonderful index)
http://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/handbook/hbktoc.htm


Innovative Accounting Educators of the Week: 

Joseph H. Callaghan, Thomas W. Lauer, and Eileen Peacock
Oakland University's School of Business Administration

An AIS Curriculum Using a Model-Oriented, Tool-Enhanced (MOTE) Framework
See http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/facdev/teaching/submissions/callaghan.htm

The innovation consists of a curriculum, instructional strategy, teaching approach, and a set of related teaching materials.  Evidence of this implemented innovation is composed of the following:

At its core, the MOTE approach aims to teach conceptual understanding and skills in data and process modeling in an accounting context. Learning these skills on a conceptual level is reinforced through the use of programmer development software. These are software tools that support systems development from the model level during systems analysis, through systems design, and to the completion of the development life cycle and the construction of the system. The first two courses of our AIS curriculum roughly follow these three phases, while the third course reiterates these phases in a complex accounting context. For further information, see the Executive Summary for the innovation at http://www.sba.oakland.edu/faculty/Callaghan/aisaward/AAA%20MOTE%20award.html


Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship (full-text)
http://www.library.ucsb.edu/istl/99-spring/


After the serious Worm.ExploreZip infection left organizations scrambling for lost information, experts are predicting more damaging viruses yet to come
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9906154/1015087/


eFUSE provides tips on how to build a better web site
http://www.efuse.com/


PHOTOTALK Message. Board
http://206.86.100.18:8080/bphototalk


Outdoor Explorer
http://www.outdoorexplorer.com/


Expedia Travel (a travel site with occasional great deals)
http://expedia.msn.com/daily/home/default.hts


MediaGossip.com (behind the news)
http://www.mediagossip.com/


This is a really flashy hyperactive way to market a product (in this case VW cars) on the web (Marketing and Advertising)
Turbonium
http://www.turbonium.com/


UReviewIt book review and discussion group (if your last paper was rejected, you can publish something here)
http://www.angelfire.com/id/urev


One of my favorite writers in days of old --- Sherwood Anderson, Winesburg, Ohio
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/ANDERSON/cover.html


Tiananmen Square, 1989: The Declassified History (for serious researchers)
http://www.seas.gwu.edu/nsarchive/NSAEBB/NSAEBB16/index.html


The Hunger Site
http://www.thehungersite.com/


Wireless Tips

The June 21 issue of Newsweek on Page 16 features Motorola's new i1000plus wireless telephone that comes with Nextel wireless services for email, stock quotes, and other selected web services. 
Just for kicks follow what I did by typing in "What is the i1000plus?" at www.ask.com .

You should also learn about the PDQ Smartphone at http://www.qualcomm.com/pdQ/

The pdQ smartphone combines state of the art CDMA technology with the most popular, fastest-selling handheld computer platform - the Palm Computing® platform

Simplify your life and lighten your briefcase with the pdQ smartphone from QUALCOMM. It's the perfect wireless way to stay connected. For starters, the pdQ smartphone is a CDMA wireless phone. Plus, it puts important Personal Information Management applications like an address book and a date book right at your fingertips, anytime you need them. With the pdQ smartphone, downloading applications or enhanced features from the web or a CD Rom is a breeze.

And there is also Phone.com at http://www.phone.com/

We are a leading provider of software that enables the delivery of Internet-based services to mass-market wireless telephones. Using their software, wireless subscribers have access to Internet-based and corporate intranet-based services, including email, news, stocks, weather, travel and sports. In addition, subscribers have access to telephony services, which may include over-the-air activation, call management, billing history information, pricing plan subscription and voice message management.

A keyboard is at last available for the Palm VII wireless PDA:
http://www.palmzone.com/experiences/09.shtml

You can read more about the Palm VII at http://www.palmzone.com/experiences/9909.shtml

Other wireless products
http://www.businessweek.com/1999/99_10/b3619004.htm


About.com at http://www.miningco.com/

Because no matter how advanced technology gets, it'll never replace smart people who care. Sure, the Net's a great resource. But it's just not that easy to find what you want, no matter how many years you've been online. Search engines and directories help, but they're not always good enough -- even if you do manage to wade through all those search results to find the information that's really relevant to you, how do you know you can trust what you've found?

That's why About.com Guides are here. Their mission is to create the ideal environment to immerse yourself in your interests. They do all the digging so you don't have to -- and they put what they find in context, providing the human judgment and personal integrity that you just can't get from a search engine or directory. So you can find what you want, and trust what you find.

It's the kind of expert guidance and leadership that only human beings can provide. That's why we've gathered hundreds of these talented people together in one place and given them the tools they need so they can focus on sharing what they've found with you. We bring humanity to the Internet.

Great destinations - Great starting points The Guides make sure that each one of our GuideSites works as both a useful starting point AND a great destination for its topic. Guides are responsible for updating their sites with new links and features at least once a week, but many update their sites daily -- so come back often and see what's new. Read a feature article or a site review, discover fresh links, post a comment, join a chat, sign up for a newsletter, send email to your Guide. It's a great new way to stay abreast of what matters most to you.

Who are About.com Guides? About.com Guides live and work in over 20 countries. Guides are specially selected to lead based on a demonstrated expertise about a particular topic, and each must have the desire and ability to help others who share their interests. All Guides have successfully completed About.com's rigorous certification program, and each must continually meet strict standards of excellence in user service and community leadership. Only about 25% of those that apply to be Guides get accepted into our training program and graduate to running a GuideSite.


From the Scout Report:  The Theory Into Practice Database
http://www.gwu.edu/~tip/index.html

The Theory Into Practice (TIP) database contains summarized descriptions of 50 educational theories related to human learning and instruction. It was compiled by Dr. Greg Kearsley, and independent consultant specializing in online education who has a PhD in educational psychology. For each instructional theory, Kearsley provides a brief overview, explains its scope and application, outlines its principles, offers a theoretical example, and lists references. In addition, some of the overviews include Quicktime video clips of Dr. Kearsley or others lecturing on specific theories. The TIP database is accessible via three indices: an alphabetic index, a learning domain index, and a learning concepts index.

A Journalist’s Guide to the Internet
http://reporter.umd.edu/

A Journalist’s Guide to the Internet is a comprehensive guide to electronic mailing lists, newsgroups, and Websites relevant to deadline news reporting. The guide contains briefly annotated links connecting journalists to information resources in numerous categories. Included are pointers to public documents, federal and state government information, legal and political resources, online newspapers, expert sources, and much more. The guide is the creation of Christopher Callahan, associate dean of the University of Maryland’s College of Journalism and senior editor of the _American Journalism Review.


Selected Articles from On the Horizon, July 2, 1999, http://horizon.unc.edu/horizon/online/login.asp

"Transforming the Role of Students and Teachers in the Information Age" by James L. Morrison
Morrison praises Spady’s vision of educational reform and provides an example of it in practice. In his graduate-level course, "The Social Context of Educational Leadership," Morrison focuses on the challenges that students are likely to face in their careers in the Information Age and on the skills they need to face these challenges successfully. He insists that, in a world where the professional knowledge base is changing rapidly, these prospective administrators must be able to use information technology tools competently. He therefore requires all class members to design a Web site, to research both individual and team papers through Internet search engines, to create presentations with PowerPoint software, and to post their work to their Web pages and thus make it accessible to other professional educators. How do students respond? Find out in "From the Editor."

"Corporate Universities: Just-in-Time Learning" by Michael D. Kull
Kull examines the goals and operations of corporate universities, one permutation of the general trend toward an expanded and diversified education market. "Instead of relying on the country’s education system to furnish packaged solutions in the form of new graduates," he writes, many "organizations want education to be delivered to the right people at the right time in the right way: just-in-time." For some corporations, the "right" solution is an independent, company-run university. For others, it is an educational alliance with an existing university; consequently, educators should pay more attention to the business market and to how traditional brick-and-mortar institutions can better serve it. After all, Kull reminds readers, "partnering represents the next step in the evolution of a knowledge economy."


Update on ERP from Information Week Online:

IBM Global Services and KPMG Consulting this week will partner with Peregrine Systems Inc. to provide infrastructure resource planning (IRP) services to their customers. Peregrine's suite of IRP applications manages the life cycles of nearly all business assets, including IT.

Industry observers say IRP is poised to be the next enterprise resource planning-with Peregrine as the next SAP. The IRP market, estimated to hit $2 billion this year, is at the same stage the ERP market was at three years ago and will experience a compounded annual growth rate of 40% over the next three years, says Neil Cooper, an analyst at securities firm the Seidler Cos. About two dozen other integrators, including Deloitte Consulting and EDS, are working with Peregrine, says Steve Gardner, president and CEO.

Peregrine has a staff of about 200 professionals to help clients implement the software. KPMG has about 35 practitioners dedicated to Peregrine's technology, with plans to grow to 150 within a year, says James Mowrer, senior manager at KPMG. IBM will allocate resources as needed to Peregrine's technology, says Linda Hanson, offerings manager for product support services. Some IBM employees have already received training from Peregrine, and IBM has completed consulting engagements on Peregrine projects in the United States and Germany.


Sterling Software Products at http://www.sterling.com/products/

Cool - A suite of software products that provides high-powered modeling and generation tools in an integrated work management environment.   (For an AIS course that uses this product see ACC 419/619 ).

Sams - Software that manages, monitors, and automates data storage in both distributed and centralized environments.

Solve - Software for end-to-end desired state management of mission critical networked business applications from a service perspective.

Vision - Software to enable customers to extend the life and usefulness of legacy applications and to facilitate enterprise-wide information access .

VM - Systems management and Web software for IBM's VM operating system .


Internet Essentials ‘99 Newsletter for the financial professional.
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html
Here are this week’s hot topics:

1. ExploreZip.worm: How to ProtectYour Computer

2. Update your Virus Protection

3. E-Trade Ranks #1 for Online Trading

4. GTE develops E-commerce for Small Business

5. OneBox- FREE Universal Messaging (including voice mail)

6. New Technology Makes Work HARDER!

7. Get Paid to Surf the Net

8. Check Your E-mail Remotely

9. Financial XML Standard Proposed

10. Quick Hitters including

11. Free lock file tool, Web Site Garage, Toysmart.com

To read more about these topics, go to http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html



And that's the way it was on June 18, 1999. 

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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June 11, 1999

Bob Jensen's tips for the day.

Probably the best place to start in motivating faculty to move into newer education technologies in their courses is to motivate them in some way (e.g., funding, performance evaluation, or whatever) to take or audit a distance education course.  It is crucial that the chosen course is a great course.  For example, it would be great if Sharon Lightner allowed selected faculty to audit her online international accounting course that is taught simultaneously across four countries using an instructional team of international faculty, standard setters, and noted practitioners.  You can read about this AICPA Innovation Award course at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255light.htmYou can hear Sharon live on August 14 at the CETA workshop described at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm .

Bob Jensen's current server shell recommendation is Blackboard at http://www.blackboard.net/ .   Blackboard has just announced an important partnering with CREN as reported at http://www.cren.net/cren/blackboard_info.html .  However, for educators whose institutions prefer to not manage their own servers, Cyberclass is still a noteworthy alternative.  See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245soft1.htm .

You can read about the innovative way Blackboard is used at Cornell University in an article entitled "Introducing and Supporting a Web Course Management Tool," by Diane Kubarek in Syllabus, June 1999, 52-55 (the online version is not yet online, but it will soon be posted to http://www.syllabus.com/ ).  

You can hear about Cyberclass live in the HyperGraphics Corporation presentation scheduled in the Syllabus99 conference in Santa Clara, California.  The program is described at http://www.syllabus.com/syll99main_cvr.htm .


Accounting education innovators highlighted this week:

S. Michael Groomer, Ph.D., CPA, CISA Associate Professor of Accounting and Information Systems Indiana University and Uday S. Murthy, Ph.D., ACA Associate Professor of Accounting & Ljungdahl Fellow Texas A & M University
http://raw.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/facdev/teaching/submissions/groomer.htm

Accounting Information Systems: A Database Approach by Uday S. Murthy and S. Michael Groomer is the first electronic textbook in business. This state of the art accounting information systems textbook presents systems concepts, technology, and the design and development of enterprise wide systems using entity-relationship modeling and relational databases. The book is published exclusively on the World Wide Web by CyberText Publishing, Inc., a company founded by Groomer and Murthy. This company is a high tech start-up firm that uses the World Wide Web as the sole channel to deliver products to customers and receive payment for them. Given the nature of the subject matter, which is technologically rich, this book is revised prior to the beginning of each semester. In addition, the Murthy & Groomer online AIS book offers an on-line quizzing system and a number of web-based instructor tools for class management. In its second year of existence, this book has been adopted at over thirty colleges and universities worldwide (including universities in Canada, Hong Kong, and Japan). In recognition of their work in behalf of this endeavor, Groomer and Murthy received the 1998 Innovative User of Technology Award from the Indiana CPA Society.

Note:  You can see Murthy and Groomer describe (in action live) how they make their materials interactive on the Internet.  Go to  Workshop 37 described at http://raw.rutgers.edu/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm
San Diego, August 15, 1:00-4:30 p.m.
"That Fearsome Advanced Step in Making Networked Materials Truly Interactive: Technology Veterans Demonstrate How and Why to Improve Learning "

Note from Bob Jensen:  In my AIS course, I have assigned Murthy and Groomer's online Accounting Information Systems book for two years.  My students take the weekly online quizzes.  The Murthy and Groomer materials and quizzes are about the only thing in the course that my students do not complain about.   See http://www.cybertext.com/ .


Bob-
In response to your material on "Ask Jeeves" . .
(See the
June 4, 1999 edition of New Bookmarks.)

I’ve seen a couple of natural language question answerers that I’m fairly impressed with. One is at the MIT AI lab: http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/infolab/start.html. This may be a partial answer to your question about whether there are academic applications for this technology.

I was also pretty impressed with the "Shallow Red" chatterbot at Neuromedia: http://www.neuromedia.com/.

There’s a good New York Times article with lots of additional links at http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/03/circuits/articles/18bots.html

Curtis Brown
Philosophy Department
Trinity University

Bob Jensen's response to the above message from Curtis:
I went to MIT AI lab web site and typed in the following questions (accompanied by the the InfoLab's answers)

Bob Jensen's First Question:  What is accounting?
MIT's InfoLab Answer: I'm afraid I can't help you with that!
Shallow Red Answer: The bot-master has not provided me with a definition of "accounting". Thank you for asking.

Bob Jensen's Second Question:   What is philosophy?
MIT's InfoLab Answer: (There were six answers --- InfoLab knows its philosophy --- perhaps to a fault.)
Shallow Red Answer: The bot-master has not provided me with a definition of "philosophy". Thank you for asking.

Should I comment further on this --- I dare not!  It would appear, however, that the knowledge bases are lacking in the most important matters (i.e., accounting).  Perhaps I should have asked about "artificial intelligence."   Actually Shallow Red is fun even if he is "shallow."  I still find Jeeves to be the least shallow of artificial intelligence knowledge bases at http://www.ask.com/ .

In any case, I thank you for sharing these leads on AI knowledge bases with us Curtis!  I did find the NY Times article very informative at http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/03/circuits/articles/18bots.html .


Dr. Jensen,

In response to your question about AskERIC, no, it does not use any sort of artificial intelligence. Actually, AskERIC questions are forwarded to the User Services Specialist (usually a librarian by training) at the various clearinghouses throughout the ERIC system. Those people then do ERIC searches and other research to answer the questions submitted. I hope that helps you in your research. Please feel free to contact me if you have any other questions.

Maria L. Kozi mkozi@eric-he.edu
Web Site Manager ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education
http://www.eriche.org
800-773-3742, ext. 30


Accounting News and Helpful Information for Educators

For the most comprehensive web site containing news about accounting, investing, and accounting education, I recommend that all accountants and accounting educators make weekly visits to AccountingEducation.com
http://www.accountingeducation.com/   (also note the comprehensive set of links).

The range of relevant websites now available to our community is huge - we don't need just another one, what we now need is a way of helping us process the data that is out there - this is where this site fits in - it's the information filter for academic accountants.

Your concern is to maximize the benefit of the Internet to your teaching and research - our aim is to scan the Internet and other sources to provide you with this service, and provide it free. There is no catch - the site is funded by advertising and sponsorship which you will note throughout the site.

This site was launched at the end of March 1999 and is currently undergoing rapid growth, but is already a valuable resource for its community. Key features of the site include:

A free weekly news feed to keep you right up to date with international developments and those more local to you - wherever you may be. Register now - only your name and email address are required. News - see the latest news items directly as they are added to our website. Reviews - independent opinions on key new publications. Jobs Database - A major global collection of jobs online for our community. Events Database - A comprehensive listing of all conferences, workshops and seminars etc in our field. Journals - This area will become the first (free) online database of contents and standing data on the main accounting journals and publications. A tremendous resource for teaching and research. Links - A searchable list of key relevant links. Library - A collection of useful resources to include papers, datasets, case materials, teaching guides, lecture notes, course information etc.

A top web site for international accounting news and resources is the ANet web site at http://www.csu.edu.au/anet/

Don't neglect the Prentice-Hall Phlip web site maintained superbly by David Fordham at James Madison University. 
(David does a good job with this.)
http://www.phlip2.marist.edu/phinternet97/accounti.htm

AccountingNet also carries updated news in a Newsletter at http://www.accountingnet.com/newsletter .

Dryden Press has useful accounting educator  news at links at
http://www.dryden.com/infosys/parker3/student/resources/

And don't forget the Accounting Students Newsletter at http://www.accountingstudents.com/ .   This web site is particularly helpful in providing career helpers to students.


Yahoo! Bookmarks
This is a potentially helpful starter bookmark web site.  You can add your own folder for your own favorite bookmarks.  One advantage in doing so is that your customized Internet bookmarks file can serve two or more computers with one file that you can access from the Internet.
Warning:  This seems to be a slow server.  Hopefully, Yahoo will increase the speed of this bookmark service.
http://bookmarks.yahoo.com/


Energizing Your Teaching

The May 1999 issue of Issues in Accounting Education has an excellent section (pp. 305-368) on energizing your teaching.  David Stout from Villanova University is to be commended for organizing a special session on this topic for the Teaching and Curriculum Section at the 1998 American Accounting Association Annual Meetings.  The May 1999 abstracts are not yet available on at the AAA's web site, but eventually they will be posted to http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/pubs/issues.htm .

Billie Cunningham has some very clever suggestions in "Energizing Your Teaching:   A View from Deep in the Trenches."  Her focus is on active learning, and she is constantly energizing and refreshing her courses. I especially recommend that you look at her ideas in Table 1, pp. 313-315.  She provides some excellent suggestions for group projects.

Dennis Hanno focuses on organizing a learning community in "Energizing Your Teaching:  Developing a Community of Learning,"  In Exhibit 3 on Page 329 he provides some ideas for group projects.  He also proposes formation of a student committee (four students) to aid in feedback and communications (see Exhibit 2 on Page 326).  His particular focus is on diversity in learning communities.

G. Peter Wilson always brings excitement to any meeting and any course.  His presentation was entitled "Teaching and Learning Can Be Energizing."  He stresses setting of learning goals and strategies for achieving success.  If you are going to the 1999 AAA meetings in San Diego, you can attend a live session from Pete on either August 14 or August 15.  He is one of the presenters on August 14 in the CETA workshop described at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htmHe is also conducting Workshop 24 on August 15.


The IASC announced that international accounting IASC standards will now be available on CD-ROM at http://www.iasc.org.uk/news/cen8_065.htm .

The CD-ROM is priced at £120 per user (each single user on a stand alone PC or each concurrent user on a network). Discounts for more than FOUR single or concurrent users are available on application to IASC. Customers in the European Union (except UK) need to quote their VAT/TVA/BTW/MOMS/MWST/IVA/FPA number on the order form OR add VAT of £21 per user. Subscriptions commence with the latest CD release available and include two further update CDs. Overseas orders can be sent direct to IASC, Publications Department, 166 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY, United Kingdom, Telephone: +44 (171) 427-5927, Fax: +44 (171) 353-0562, E-mail: publications@iasc.org.uk  Internet: http://www.iasc.org.uk .

The IASC international standards are also available along with accounting and auditing standards in various nations are also available on the PriceWaterhouse Coopers Researcher CD-ROM at http://extranet.pw.com/PWRUpdates.htm

PricewaterhouseCooper's Researcher is a comprehensive accounting and auditing library on a single CD-ROM disc. It features a vast database covering the United States and many other parts of the world as well as commentary by PricewaterhouseCooper's professionals. The United States section includes FASB, AICPA and EITF publications. Similar authoritative literature for other countries is included where the owner of the copyright permits us to include the information.

Features include browsing, searching, cross-referencing, personal annotations, printing, and exporting text to word processing programs. PricewaterhouseCooper's Researcher can be customized to meet your company's text and image retrieval needs such as policies and procedures manuals, or other internal reports and correspondence.

I have been using the Researcher CD for a number of years.  It is a great resource, although searches are tricky.  The software has steadily improved.  This is one area where the Ask Jeeves software would really be helpful, although the Ask Jeeves software carries they hefty pricing that I discussed in the June 4, 1999 edition of New Bookmarks.


It is a good idea to track what is happening at Western Governors University at http://www.wgu.edu/wgu/index.html

WGU is education's online "one-stop" shop. WGU is comprised of 31 education providers from around the United States who currently offer nearly 400 courses and two dozen complete degree programs through the WGU Catalog. There's even a doctoral degree available! Plus, WGU is offering 10 of its own unique competency-based degrees and certificates. Look here to see all the academic programs currently available through WGU's Catalog.

WGU's strategy at the higher education level resembles Mike Milken's Knowledge Universe strategy at the elementary and secondary education levels. i.e. a strategy of gobbling up the competition.  Whereas Mike Milken tends to buy up top competitors, WGU forms partnerships.  The latest WGU partnering is with University Access as reported in on Page 16 of the June 1999 edition of Syllabus (the online version is not yet online, but it will soon be posted to http://www.syllabus.com/ ).  Although WGU primarily targets online courses to 21 states west of the Mississippi River, WGU formed a partnership with the North American division of the giant Open University in the United Kingdom to deliver courses east of the Mississippi River.  Some of WGU's other partners also deliver courses and programs all over the U.S.  Pricing is rather interesting.   For example, a masters degree from WGU costs a flat $3,000 tuition and is mostly comprised of courses from top universities.  Many of WGU's courses are certificate-level courses rather than academic credit courses.  However, certificate-level courses are probably the wave of the future in life-long learning (see below).

Enrollments in WGU were initially disappointing, although that is not surprising in a startup situation of something as different at WGU in higher education.  Does anybody have any information about enrollment trends and course quality?  If so please contact me at rjensen@trinity.edu .


I mentioned above that WGU is heavy into certificate programs that are competency based.  This is one of the various "21st Century Teaching and learning Patterns" predicted in the cover article by Judith Boettcher in Syllabus, June 1999, 18-24 (the online version is not yet online, but it will soon be posted to http://www.syllabus.com/ ).  Judith Boettcher is affiliated with CREN.  She predicts the following scenarios (which appear to be heavily in line with the emerging WGU programs mentioned above):

  1. A "career university" sector will be in place (with important partnerships of major corporations with prestige universities).
  2. Most higher education institutions, perhaps 60 percent, will have teaching and learning management software systems linked to their back office administration systems.
  3. New career universities will focus on certifications, modular degrees, and skill sets.
  4. The link between courses and content for courses will be broken.
  5. Faculty work and roles will make a dramatic shift toward specialization  (with less stress upon one person being responsible for the learning material in an entire course).
  6. Students will be savvy consumers of educational services (which is consistent with the Chronicle of Higher Education article at http://chronicle.com/free/99/05/99052701t.htm ).
  7. The tools for teaching and learning will become as portable and ubiquitous as paper and books are today.

Judith Boettcher claims that most of her predictions are extractions of current trends.


On Page 46, the June 1999 issue of Syllabus lists a Buyer's Guide for a number of distance education programs.  These include the following:

For hundreds of other programs, you can contact the following:

Yahoo's Distance Education Guide
http://dir.yahoo.com/Education/Distance_Learning/Colleges_and_Universities/

Petersen's Distance Learning Page
http://www.petersons.com/dlearn/

Information About Distance Learning
http://www.gwu.edu/~etl/programs.html

Note Appendix 1 at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm

Distance Learning, the Internet, and the World Wide Web. ERIC Digest by   Kerka, Sandra
http://www.ed.gov/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed395214.html

U.S. Department of Education's Nationally Recognized Accrediting Agencies and Associations
http://ifap.ed.gov/csb_html/programs.htm


According to David Welton of CSU-Chico, distance education will get a boost in the arm from WebTV delivery in cheap set-top boxes on television sets.  WebTV greatly improves upon television reading of text and has many of the advantages taking a course on the computer.  One drawback that remains is that WebTV is unable to display multiple windows like computers display multiple windows.  Also Java Applet support is still not available on WebTV.  However, many persons who watch TV but shy away from the complexities of a computer may be drawn to interactive education on their TV sets.   The full article by David Welton is entitled "A Web-Based Distance Learning Experience:  WebTV," in Syllabus, June 1999, 56-57 (the online version is not yet online, but it will soon be posted to http://www.syllabus.com/ ).

Also see the WebTV Network at http://www.webtv.net/ .


Many universities do not have adequate support facilities for training faculty in new technologies and technical support teams for course adaptations to new technologies.   George Culp from the University of Texas at Austin provides some helpful guides for "Establishing a Center for Instructional Technologies" as reported in pp. 34-36 in the June 1999 edition of Syllabus (the online version is not yet online, but it will soon be posted to http://www.syllabus.com/ ).  The article also discusses innovative ways of funding such a center.

A free email journal called "Need-To-Know" provides helpful information for technolgoy center investments and operations.  Send a subscription request via email to join-need-to-know@news.eduprise.com


Many educators would like to put more materials on the web, but they are concerned about protecting access to all or parts of documents.  For example, a professor may want to share a case with the world but limit the accompanying case solution to selected users.  Or a professor may want to make certain lecture notes available but limit the access of certain copyrighted portions to students in a particular course.   If protecting parts of your documents is of great interest, you may want to consider NetCloak from Maxum at http://www.maxum.com/ .  You can download a free trial version.

NetCloak Professional Edition combines the power of Maxum's classic combo, NetCloak and NetForms, into a single CGI application or WebSTAR API plug-in. With NetCloak Pro, you can use HTML forms on your web site to create or update your web pages on the fly. Or you can store form data in text files for importing into spreadsheets or databases off-line. Using NetCloak Pro, you can easily create online discussion forums, classified ads, chat systems, self-maintaining home pages, frequently-asked-question lists, or online order forms!

NetCloak Pro also gives your web site access to e-mail. Users can send e-mail messages via HTML forms, and NetCloak Pro can create or update web pages whenever an e-mail message is received by any e-mail address. Imagine providing HTML archives of your favorite mailing lists in minutes!

NetCloak Pro allows users to "cloak" pages individually or "cloak" individual paragraphs or text strings.  The level of security seems to be much higher than scripted passwords such as scripted passwords in JavaScript or VBScript.

Eric Press led me to http://www.maxum.com/NetCloak/FAQ/FAQList.html   (Thank you Eric, and thanks for the "two lunches")

Richard Campbell responded as follows:

Alternatives to using Netcloak: 1. Symantec http://www.symantec.com  has a free utility called Secret which will password-protect any type of file.

2. Winzip http://www.winzip.com  has a another shareware utility called Winzip - Self-Extractor, which has a password protect capability. The advantage to this approach is that you can bundle different file types (.doc, xls) , zip them and you can have them automatically install to a folder that you have named. If you have a shareware install utility that creates a setup.exe routine, you also can have it install automatically on the student's machine. The price of this product is about $30.


HotMetal Pro claims to be superior to Microsoft FrontPage for web sites and web documents
http://www.softquad.com/products/


If you are after easy-to-use course management software or campus management software (for managing multiple departments or programs), you may want to consider WebCourse in a Box or the Course Builder Toolbox products from MadDuck Technologies at http://www.wcbinfo.com/


Become a part of the G8 Summit annual meetings of the heads of state of the eight leading industrialized nations --- macroeconomic management, international trade, and relations with developing countries.  This web site is very professional and sets a standard for how to share meetings with the world.  From the University of Toronto and eCollege (formerly Real Education)
http://www.g8online.o
rg/


Ubiquitous specialty computers and Internet devices:  Are they the nemesis of Microsoft Corporation?

"Clever New Gadget Makes E-Mail Very Easy," By Walter S. Mossberg, WSJ Personal Technology Column,
http://www.ptech.wsj.com/ptech.html   .  Excerpts from Walter's article are shown below:

MY MOTHER has been sending me e-mail lately. To some of you, that's no big deal. But my Mom is 75 years old and has never touched a computer. She's a smart woman, a formidable woman, just not a woman who cares to spend her golden years wrestling with a personal computer. So, Rhoda Mossberg wasn't on e-mail. But that was before the MailStation people arrived in my office.

The MailStation is a new $99 e-mail machine, small and friendly and intended for computer-averse people like my mother, and millions of others even younger. It's from Cidco of Morgan Hill, Calif., a big maker of telephone gear such as caller-ID boxes. The machine nominally goes for $149 and comes with built-in e-mail service that costs $10 a month. But if you pay for a year of service up front, you get the machine for $99 and the service for another $99 for the year, or $8.25 a month for an unlimited number of e-mail messages.

The MailStation is the latest in a new class of devices I've been advocating for years, called information appliances. Unlike a general-purpose PC, which tries to do everything and winds up being way too complex, these appliances are customized for performing only a handful of digital tasks very easily and well. Examples of info appliances around today are the Palm handheld computers, WebTV set-top boxes and Sony PlayStation game machines. All are computers, but they're not general-purpose computers.

Things that make Cidco's MailStation unique among specialty devices are a fully functional keyboard, a screen that will let you read up to 12 lines of an email message at a time, a spell checker, and other features in a device small enough to fit in a purse. 
http://www.cidco.com/

The MailStation is just one of many forthcoming Internet devices and specialty products that takes a subset of things we can do on a full computer and makes then easier to use on a smaller device that does not require a complex operating system such as the Windows, Mac, and Linux operating systems. 

The Psion Series 5 gives you the computing power that you need without the excess weight. It has a touch type
keyboard and full page width touch-sensitive screen, yet weighs less than 13 ounces (or less than 360g), has around 35 hours of battery life and fits into your pocket. The Series 5 handheld computer is compatible with all leading Windows 95/NT4 word processors, spreadsheets and databases, and synchronizes with schedule and contacts software on your desktop PC, including Microsoft, Lotus, Corel, WordPerfect and other applications. PsiWin 2 - included as standard - docks your Series 5 to your PC.  See http://www.psion.com/series5/index.html

The market share leader in the latest PDA devices is Palm VII.  The Internet connections to the world are wireless and use only AAA batteries.   I wish it had a keyboard when it is not connected to a PC.  But there are some great features in spite of not having a keyboard.  For a Palm VII product review, see http://www.computerworld.com/home/print.nsf/all/990521palm .
The Palm home page is at http://www.palm.com/

Stan Gibson has some doubts about these Internet devices and specialty computers in an article entitled "Non-PC devices are fine, but they're not, well, PCs ."
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,404732,00.html


News from or about Microsoft Corporation

PC Labs review of some great Office 2000 tools
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,406031,00.html

Office 2000 Developer Preview
http://msdn.microsoft.com/officedev/preview/default.asp

SQL Server 7.0 and XML Power Microsoft’s Product Catalog
http://www.microsoft.com/backstage/

Microsoft Helps Consumers Make Their Home Computers Y2K-Proof
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/06-01y2k.htm

WebTV: Simplicity, Convenience, and Customer Satisfaction
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/06-02webtv.htm

Free download of Microsoft Vizact 2000 Preview (for creation of interactive documents)
http://www.microsoft.com/vizact/

Two Microsoft acronyms everybody should memorize are ADO and RDS.  See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm#ThirdJava .  Alternately, you can look up "database" at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm .

POWERUSER TIP FOR INTERNET EXPLORER 5: MANAGING AN OVERLOADED FAVORITES MENU

If you like collecting lots of Favorites, but you’re not good at organizing them, then you have a problem. Trying to find a specific Favorite by scanning through a large Favorites menu can be like trying to find the proverbial needle in a haystack. But you can locate those hard to find Favorites using the Windows Start Menu Find function. To track down a Favorite, first go to the Windows Start menu and select Find/Files or Folders.... Windows will display a Find: All Files dialog box. In the Look in: dropdown box, type C:\WINDOWS\Favorites, or browse to this directory. Finally, type the Favorite name you want to search in the Named: dropdown box and click the Find Now button. Windows will display all the Favorites that match your query and list information about each Favorite’s name, directory location, size, type, and date modified. If there are multiple results, you can click on the column information title and sort the results by name, date, and so on.

For other Microsoft product tips, go to the Microsoft Product Insider Web site and click on any Product Start Page.
http://microsoft.com/insider/mi/pfpi.htm


WEB PAGES: STUDENTS RATING BASIS
Andrew Priest, 30 May 1999

A recent Chronicle of Higher Education article, "Students Say They Check Courses' Web Pages Before Deciding to Enroll" suggests that at least some students believe that "the best professors are the ones who bother to make Web pages for their courses." The article goes on to suggest, that web pages are used as basis of unit (or course) selection!   See http://chronicle.com/free/99/05/99052701t.htm .

Virtually all universities will soon become fiercely competitive as a result of this trend among student recruits. 


ELECTRONIC COMMERCE TECHNOLOGIES: A STUDY OF RISKS IN ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE (EDI) SYSTEMS
Andrew Priest , 30 May 1999

The above paper by Catherine Hardy has been released in abbreviated on the Australian CPA website. The paper is, from this source, only available to ASCPA members. The author does however, invite interested persons to email her direct for a fuller copy of the paper. Catherine can be contacted at mailto:chardy@csu.edu.au .


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm

Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week's featured ACE professor is Heidemarie Lundblad
Institution: California State University, Northridge
Course Title: Accounting 301 -Intermediate Accounting II
Textbook: Intermediate Accounting
Authors: Chasteen, Flaherty, O'Connor
Professor Lundblad shares some problem solutions and examples (bonds, SFAS 76, pensions, leases, etc.) that can be downloaded into your computer.  Thank you for sharing Heidemarie.


Bob Jensen's favorite TV show --- Computer Chronicles on PBS
http://www.cmptv.com/computerchronicles/shows/97-98/1512cbg/1512-summary.html


Computer security:  The latest on hack attacks
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,1014940,00.html

Why the Feds are so easily hack attacked
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,406084,00.html


Hi Bob,

Wait until you read this newsletter. I just had to forward this item to you. Mitchell Levy has 1,600 subscribers and I can see why. His analysis is squarely focused on business to business over the Internet. Great insight and great Web references throughout the newsletter. Enjoy.
Neal Hannon

From Bob Jensen:  I did not paste in the rather lengthy message forwarded by Neal.   After skimming a few articles, it appears that Mitchell Levy really has a street-smart handle on what is happening on the streets of e-commerce (EC), e-marketing, and new technologies.  I signed up.  The main link to the newsletter is at
http://ecmgt.com/

Levy identifies the following top 10 trends in e-commerce:

1999 and 2000 will be the years of "show me the money", essentially companies will continue to demonstrate success with EC while small to medium enterprises (SME's) flock to the net

#09 - Will see a non US-based player dominating some EC space

#08 - SHOPPING: a) Wallets and "impulse buying" will take root, b) Price-driven buying: looking for the best deals will be a big play and c) Special EC function keys will appear on key boards

#07 - Continued price transparency with auctions and other real-time pricing vehicles...will see prices for scarce items increase and prices for commodities decrease

#06 - Continue growth of affinity groups (e.g. Chemdex, Metalsite, Rosettanet, etc.)

#05 - Dramatic increase in access speeds and appliances (mobile devices, ATMs, home/office appliances, etc.) connecting to the Web and integrated into EC applications

#04 - More top-level executives will focus on and be responsible for EC

#03 - Movement of EC to a service industry rather than purely product or technology driven...Outsourcing EC functions becomes very popular

#02 - Companies will begin to recognize that the value-added stuff begins after the customer hits "submit order"...Customer service will become the point of differentiation

#01 - While consumer-based security concerns continue to decrease, privacy concerns will increase leading companies for focus on the non-monetary forms of currency (time, attention & trust)


Some excerpts in a message from Phil Livingston

Cash Forecasting - Richard Wallman, CFO of Allied Signal, did a great presentation on cash flow forecasting and the revenue chain process. I highly recommend it to you. Here is a link to the Powerpoint presentation: http://www.fei.org/download/RFW_MAY.ppt. If you have a presentation like this, on any topic, send it to me and we will share it with other FEIers.

Case-Study Companies Needed for New FERF Research Project - Last week the FERF Trustees (led by Don Macleod, CFO of National Semiconductor, Arthur Neis, CFO of Life Care Services, and Larry Prendergast, CEO of AT&T Investment Management) approved three new research projects. One of those is a study of ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) systems implementations in small to medium-sized companies, ($100 million to $500 million in revenue). If you have implemented an ERP system, consider being a FERF case-study company. You’ll help your peers heading down the same path. Call Gracie Hemphill, FERF project manager, at 973.898.4664 or e-mail at mailto:ghemphill@fei.org.

International Accounting Standards - Ed Jenkins, chairman of the FASB, gave an important talk in Vancouver about the future of international accounting standards. We have the text of his talk on our website at http://www.fei.org/download/jenkins.doc. Ed nicely summarizes the goals of proposed changes to international accounting standards. This is a hot and important topic and that comes through upon reading this paper.

Phil Livingston
President and CEO
Financial Executives Institute
mailto:plivingston@fei.org


Thank you Chris Faye
Some Tools for the Timing of Investments
http://www.mirat.com/


dowjones.com - free services from the The Wall Street Journal.
http://dowjones.com/


Financial information and message board service
Raging Bull
http://www.ragingbull.com/


Tell your kids - Fastest Growing Occupations
http://stats.bls.gov/news.release/ooh.table1.htm

The top winners (not many surprises) are ranked as follows:

Database administrators, computer support specialists, and all other computer scientists -  Bachelor’s degree
Computer engineers -  Bachelor’s degree
Systems analysts --Bachelor’s degree
Personal and home care aides - Short-term on-the-job training
Physical and corrective therapy assistants and aides - Moderate-term on-the-job training
Home health aides - Short-term on-the-job training
Medical assistants - Moderate-term on-the-job training


Books we should all be reading this summer if we only had the time
TJM.org: Books
http://www.tjm.org/books/index.htm


Book reviews for those of us without much spare time.  A free, searchable library of more than 50,000 New York Times book reviews
http://www.nytimes.com/


The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency offers help to small businesses
Small Business Gateway—EPA
http://www.epa.gov/smallbusiness/


Free trials of over 650 magazines
http://client.lycos.com/r.asp?CB&xUvhtDylxaEvI928436629


Complain!com
- Identifies who to send your complaint to.
- Writes a professional complaint letter
- Sends the letters to you with envelopes addressed to the Chief Executive and the Customer Care Executive of the company.

Then you:
- Review the letters, add your signature, and include any supporting documentation.
http://www.complain.com/


BBC World Service - Audio archives of the 20th Century
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/mycentury/


Americans for the Arts
http://www.artsusa.org/


National Bird-Feeding Society (really)
http://www.birdfeeding.org/


The ADAM Heath Web Site
http://www.adam.com/


A Message on XML from InformationWeek Daily

Financial XML Standard Proposed

A proposed standard for wholesale financial-services transactions on the Internet was released yesterday by J.P. Morgan & Co. and PricewaterhouseCoopers. Based on the Extensible Markup Language-the rapidly growing Internet standard for data sharing between applications-the Financial Products Markup Language is designed to handle integration of Internet services such as electronic trading and confirmations, risk analysis, and the exchange of market data. J.P. Morgan is working on a suite of client services that employ the standard. J.P. Morgan and PricewaterhouseCoopers are working for the language to gain industry acceptance, and will begin a series of workshops and seminars next month for the financial-services industry, software vendors, and others. · Bruce Caldwell

For more on XML, see "Join The Standards Debate" http://www.informationweek.com/736/36iujl.htm


A message from Neal Hannon

Welcome to the latest edition of the Internet Essentials ‘99 Newsletter for the financial professional.
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html
Here are this week’s hot topics:

1. ECNow.com’s Electronic Commerce Web sites

2. Extranets for Financial Services

3. Bob Jensen’s Accounting and Finance Updates

4. Improve your Business Research with Tutorial

5. Message from Netstock.com President

6. VORTALS: The vertical industry e-business answer

7. Unscramble attachments using WinZip

8. Good e-books are coming.

9. Quick hitters including MR. WAKE-UP, free phone wake-up calls, news for nerds, and more.



And that's the way it was on June 11, 1999.  Factoid:   A duck’s quack doesn’t echo, and no one knows why this is so.  (But that was before ducks started using email.)

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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June 4, 1999

There are some great continuing education program modules this year.   Accounting educators and others attending the annual American Accounting Association meetings in San Diego in August should note that the Continuing Education Program (CEP) sessions are now listed at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm

Information about the entire meeting details can be found at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/meeting99.htm


A historical listing of AccountingNet's chosen Web Sites of the Week
http://www.accountingnet.com/community/siteoftheweek/index.html (Scroll down to "See Past Winners Search")


Find out what's new in U.S. Universities (added to monthly)
http://www.utexas.edu/world/univ/new /


Thank you Richard Meyer
Reveal is an automated alerting service that delivers the tables of contents of your favorite periodicals directly to your e-mail box. The UnCover Reveal service also allows you to create search strategies for your favorite topics. These search strategies are then run against the entire UnCover database of 17,000 periodicals, and weekly alerts on the latest articles published on the specified topics are also delivered to the your e-mail address.

The Coates Library has established a Reveal subscription for Trinity U. faculty only. Faculty can set up their own accounts by following the instructions below. Please ask for help from your liaison librarian if you encounter any problems setting up an account.  Trinity faculty should go to http://www.trinity.edu/departments/library/reveal.html .
Everyone else can go to http://uncweb.carl.org/reveal/ (A single-user fee is $25 per year)


Tom Hicks has some really helpful tutorials for authoring and networking
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~thicks/   (Go to tutorials)

I am finding the following tutorial especially helpful:  "Introduction To Programming ODBC On Windows 95/NT/NT Server for Database Distribution & Access via the Web"
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~thicks/Odbc/ODBC.html

Thanks for sharing Tom!


Please share your answer to the following question:
Are there any applications of "Ask Jeeves" or related artificial intelligence natural language searching software in academe (universities, libraries, or academic associations)?

When I visited the Ask Jeeves web site, I did not find any serious applications in academe. What a pity!  See http://www.ask.com . For example, I can ask Jeeves about the weather at the University of California, but I cannot ask about any technical expertise of accounting professors at UC.  Of course the $400,000 to $1,000,000 price for Ask Jeeves software is a high hurdle to cross in the world of academe.  Unlike most other web sites, the Ask Jeeves web site uses artificial intelligence for natural language questions?  It also gives listings of hits in other search engine databases besides its own huge database.

When reading the following article, it struck me like a thunderbolt that this is what is needed for higher education is an Ask Jeeves type of knowledge database in virtually every discipline.  What a marvelous thing it would be to put academic expert transcriptions on a server along with other reference materials and then use the natural language capabilities of "Ask Jeeves" software or similar types of software. For a review of "Ask Jeeves" software see http://newmedia.com/newmedia/99/06/realworld/Ask_Jeeves.html

This is another sad example of where academe badly lags private industry in utilizing emerging technologies. We have billions of dollars of resources, but our infrastructures and traditions just do not allow us to shift priorities in budgeting. This is one area where the R1 universities have a tremendous opportunity and comparative advantage to become leaders in knowledge base innovations.  Dell Corporation, Toshiba, and many other hardware and software vendors have adopted Ask Jeeves software for answering technical support questions. 


Yahoo is still my choice if you have a particular web search category.  However, my first choice in general is now Ask Jeeves because of the neat way I can type a natural language query for Jeeves.  I suggest that you ask Jeeves a question just for kicks and then see how fast you get hooked on Jeeves.  See  http://www.ask.com/ .


From Infobits
The ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education (ERIC-HE) is offering two new services. "ERIC Higher Education News" is ERIC-HE's new quarterly electronic newsletter featuring items of interest to the higher education community. The first issue is available on the Web at http://www.eriche.org/new/letter1.html ERIC/HE  has introduced a search tutorial for ERIC database users. The tutorial covers everything from Boolean operators to relevance ranking, and even includes nine search exercises. The tutorial is on the Web at http://www.eriche.org/workshops/searching.html ERIC-HE is one of sixteen clearinghouses in the Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC), a federally-funded national information system provided by the U.S. Department of Education.

For more information about ERIC-HE, contact ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education, The George Washington University, Graduate School of Education and Human Development, One Dupont Circle, Suite 630, Washington, DC 20036-1183 USA; tel: 202-296-2597; fax: 202-452-1844; email: mkozi@eric-he.edu; Web: http://www.eriche.org/   The ERIC database is a service of AskERIC, a "personalized Internet-based service providing education information to teachers, librarians, counselors, administrators, parents, and others throughout the United States and the world." AskERIC and the ERIC database are accessible on the Web at http://ericir.syr.edu


Investing in E-Commerce and other technologies poses huge problems for business decision makers, because the popular investment criteria such as Return on Investment (ROI) are so difficult to compute and there are so many uncertainties about both investments and returns.  These topics make interesting case studies in both managerial accounting and accounting information systems courses.  Two articles of interest are as follows:

"E-Commerce: New Sense of Urgency Companies Rush For Online Market Share Flurry of multimillion-dollar deals signals new effort to be competitive in E-commerce," by Clinton Wilder in Information Week, May 24, 1999, 48-56.

"Rethinking ROI Some projects have become so important that companies are looking for new ways to measure their return on investment--or are dispensing wtih ROI studies completely," by Tom Stein in Information Week, May 24, 1999, 59-68.

Both articles deal with problems of ROI as a criterion for investment decisions and performance evaluation.  The online versions of these articles can be found at http://www.informationweek.com/maindocs/index_735.htm

One of our accounting educator experts on such matters is Amy Ray at the University of Tennessee.  Since joining UT, she has received a grant to participate as part of an external review team for Allen Bradley (1992) and is currently a member of a UT team awarded an NSF grant to conduct a joint study with Eastman Chemical.   See http://funnelweb.utcc.utk.edu/~scrusenb/ut_acct/faculty/gatian.html


The May/June 1999 issue of Educom Review is available in hard copy and in electronic form at http://www.educause.edu/pub/er/erm99/erm993.html . This issue has two articles about coaches versus teachers in education.   On Page 28, Don Norman states the following:

So the real trick in education is to provide just the right level of difficulty to allow learning to occur and not to allow frustration to occur.  If students are too frustrated, they will just give up.   I would like to see a much more interactive style of lecturing where professors become coaches as opposed to the source of all knowledge.

On Page 22, Peter Denning states writes as follows:

Nevertheless, many faculty feel disoriented as teachers in the world of multimedia, web-based modules, TV links, live-boards, chat rooms and other affects of information technology.  They have not been trained as coaches and managers and their institutions offer no significant development programs to help them learn; and yet at some point they will be evaluated more on the results produced by their students than on opinions of their faculty peers.  They are professionals but do not see that this is the primary reason that students come to them.  Herein lies the major opportunity for professional success of teachers.

To this I might add the problem of overcoming biases of students --- they expect teachers to teach rather than be "coaches and managers."  Even if their learning is superior and longer-lasting after being coached and managed, they may give low ratings to educators for not teaching.  Being taught, in viewpoint of many students, means not having to learn as much on their own and having to read less and sweat less.    Students seek out teachers who funnel feed great knowledge with masterful wisdom.  It is the hard-hearted and battle-scarred coach who can overcome the urge to be popular knowing that without pain there is not gain.   My more detailed comments about this are located at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/265wp.htm


Distance Education and Accreditation Guides

Yahoo's Distance Education Guide
http://dir.yahoo.com/Education/Distance_Learning/Colleges_and_Universities/

Petersen's Distance Learning Page
http://www.petersons.com/dlearn/

Information About Distance Learning
http://www.gwu.edu/~etl/programs.html

Note Appendix 1 at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm

Distance Learning, the Internet, and the World Wide Web. ERIC Digest by   Kerka, Sandra
http://www.ed.gov/databases/ERIC_Digests/ed395214.html

U.S. Department of Education's Nationally Recognized Accrediting Agencies and Associations
http://ifap.ed.gov/csb_html/programs.htm


Some additional web sites for education statistics

Condition of Education (Annual Report to the U.S. Congress)
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs/ce/index.html

Education Statistics Slide Show (Thank you Grace York for this great free reference service from the University of Michigan)
http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/edstats/slide1.htm

Digest of Education Statistics
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs/D96/

U.S. Department of Education
http://www.ed.gov/

DAS Web
http://www.pedar-das.org/

UNESCO Statistical Yearbook
http://www.education.unesco.org/educprog/stat/index.html

Fedstats
http://www.fedstats.gov/


This is a really interesting web site for comparing nations.  You can compare any two nations on subsets of statistics that you choose yourself (the choices in education comparisons are severely limited).
http://www.your-nation.com/compare_input.asp


This is a really useful education technology and education assessment search engine
http://socserv2.mcmaster.ca/srnet/evnet.htm

You will also find an Evaluation and Learning Assessment section at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week's featured ACE professor is Susan Crosson at Santa Fe Community College, FL
Course Name:  ACG2001 Principles of Accounting I
Textbook:  Principles of Accounting
Author(s):  Needles, Powers, Mills, Anderson
Course Web Site:  http://inst.santafe.cc.fl.us/~scrosson/2001index.htm
Among other things, Amy shares her PowerPoint presentations (with or without audio) and homework templates.  Thank you for sharing Amy.


News from or about Microsoft

What useful changes should we expect in Microsoft's Access 2000?
http://www.zdnet.com/zdhelp/stories/main/0,5594,2214470,00.html

Half-baked features of Microsoft's Access 2000 (features ADO issues in networked databases)
http://www.zdnet.com/zdhelp/stories/main/0,5594,2214506,00.html

Access 2000 conclusion (some great enhancements along with programming nightmares)
http://www.zdnet.com/zdhelp/stories/main/0,5594,2214533,00.html

What useful changes should we expect in Microsoft's Outlook 2000?
http://www.zdnet.com/zdhelp/stories/main/0,5594,2214300,00.html

What's missing in Microsoft's Outlook 2000?
http://www.zdnet.com/zdhelp/stories/main/0,5594,2214448,00.html

What is the conclusion on Microsoft's Outlook 2000 in general?
(While I was writing this sentence, Outlook 1997 idling in background crashed my system.  I hope Outlook 2000 is more stable.)
http://www.zdnet.com/zdhelp/stories/main/0,5594,2214455,00.html

What’s new in Microsoft’s Internet Explorer 5?
http://mspress.microsoft.com/news/features/

Microsoft Antitrust Trial Resumes
http://www.internetwk.com/story/INW19990601S0006
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9906012/2267766/


A historical listing of the ZDNet Hotfile of the Day
http://www.zdnet.com/swlib/allhot/hotnet.html


Trends in voice/data hardware and software
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,405330,00.html


Computer jargon (I have added some new things)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/booktech.htm


Child and Family News (from Tufts University)
http://www.tufts.edu/cfn/


Accounting jargon (I have added some new things)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbus.htm


This week's featured accounting education innovation comes from A. Faye Borthick at Georgia State University.  The project is entitled "Collaborative Discovery Learning Online in an Information Systems Assurance Course" at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/facdev/teaching/submissions/borthick.htm

This enhancement is the use of collaborative discovery learning online in a masters course Information Systems Assurance at Georgia State University (syllabus at http://www.gsu.edu/~accafb/ac863.htm ).Collaborative discovery learning online was implemented with synchronous class sessions conducted over the Internet with a chat room for discussions and a presentation frame for access to web sites containing course resources and student work. The basis for the enhancement is the idea that immersing learners in a community of practice in which they solve problems together (collaborative discovery learning) is more likely to be effective in preparing students for work environments in which new problems are the norm and professionals work collaboratively to solve them than learning events characterized by teachers standing in front of classes dispensing knowledge. That is, it is more important to help students learn how to find or create knowledge as they need it and to negotiate its meaning within the community of practice than to teach them only what the teacher believes they need to know now. In addition to class sessions, examinations were administered over the Internet. The enhancement has the benefits of making learning more effective due to its use of collaborative discovery learning online, more accessible because participants may be anywhere they have Internet access, and more affordable because the course could be available to students in universities where it has been economically infeasible to offer it locally.


Apple Corporation's operating system for its Mac OS X servers is called "Darwin."  Apple announced that it will make the Darwin source code available to developers.  It is a variant of UNIX.
http://www.apple.com/hotnews/features/osstrategy3.html

The campus PC versus Mac war is reheating with Stanford University finding the scale tipped in favor of the Mac
http://rescomp2.stanford.edu/inrooms/MacVsPC.html

A more complete discussion of IT on trends for campus computing can be found at
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,403642,00.html

If you go the PC route, you can find some pointers at
http://computingcentral.msn.com/topics/hardware/techcorner1.asp


Journal of Digital Informations
http://jodi.ecs.soton.ac.uk/


M/C/T (Journal of Media, Culture and Technology)
The first issue (published in English) is available at
http://www.kk.kau.se/mct/start.html


How to avoid Windows system crashes using the Resource Meter
http://www.zdjournals.com/w95/9904/w959943.htm


Some insights on how Lycos uses a database system for its huge search engines
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,403643,00.html


From InfoBits
The Ohio University Telecommunications Center’s Website, "Wired for Books," contains not only published works of local and canonical authors, but also the voices of authors and actors reading selections. By downloading Real Network’s free software, RealPlayer, you can hear the works while reading along with the texts on the Website. (A link to the RealPlayer software is included on the Website.) Authors currently included are poets Emily Dickenson, Terry Anderson, Bonnie Proudfoot, and Rabindranath Tagore. One of the site’s most frequently-visited features is an animated slide show of Beatrix Potter’s "The Tale of Peter Rabbit." The site also includes audio segments of Ohio University scholars discussing the works of Raymond Carver, Zora Neale Hurston, Toni Morrison, and Leo Tolstoy.
Access "Wired for Books" at http://www.tcom.ohiou.edu/books/


Some tips for novices when purchasing a PC (in case you didn't see this link above)
http://computingcentral.msn.com/topics/hardware/techcorner1.asp


Some tips on purchasing the Palm VII (this is a hot PDA item)
http://www.palm.net/


Some consumer tips on products in general
http://www.productopia.com/1/0,1516,1-0-0,FF.html

Consumer suggestion web site
http://www.suggestions.com/

Comments on defective products
http://www.defective.com/


Teaching resources for science educators
http://www.scienceprof.com/


The Unbound Bible
http://unbound.biola.edu


The complete works of William Shakespeare in digitized form
http://www.shakespeare.sk/


Search for wild life photographs
http://www.bbcwild.com/

Foto8 (Photographs from around the world)
http://foto8.com/


The Long Walk of Nelson Mandela (PBS)
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/mandela/


Culture Machine
http://culturemachine.tees.ac.uk/


PBS claims the transistor was probably the most important invention in the 20th Century
http://www.pbs.org/transistor/


America Quilts
http://www.pbs.org/americaquilts/


Eventually we will all be able to put our own virtual body on the web and then go shopping for apparel.  Full-figured women can do this now (for clothing from some of the major department stores)
http://www.just4meplus.com/


Focus on Math in the T.H.E. Journal, May 1999, p. 32
http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/current/sw.asp

The KnowZone
Addison Wesley Longman
Reading, MA
(877) 262-8774
www.kz.com
Online Reader Service #401

Geometry World
Cognitive Technologies Corporation
Rockville, MD
(800) 335-0781
Online Reader Service #402

Math FactMaster
Curriculum Associates, Inc.
North Billerica, MA
(800) 225-0248
www.curriculumassociates.com
Online Reader Service #403

Awesome Animated Monster Maker Math
Houghton Mifflin Interactive
Somerville, MA
(800) 829-7962
www.hminet.com
Online Reader Service #404

JumpStart for Kindergartners
Knowledge Adventure
Torrance, CA
(800) 545-7677
www.knowledgeadventure.com
Online Reader Service #405
NetTutor
Link-Systems International
Tampa, FL
(813) 615-0377
www.link-systems.com
Online Reader Service #406

Math Shop Deluxe
Scholastic New Media
Jefferson City, MO
(800) Scholastic
www.scholastic.com
Online Reader Service #407

Algebrator
SoftMath
San Antonio, TX
(877) SOF-MATH
www.softmath.com
Online Reader Service #408

Algebra Assistant
Pre-Calculus Assistant
Calculus Assistant
Mathpert
Santa Clara, CA
(800) 361-1001
www.mathpert.com
Online Reade

 


Language translation services:

Berlitz Translation Services http://www.berlitz.com/
Geonexus at http://www.geonexus.com/
Organic Online http://www.organic.com/

And don't forget the free Alta Vista service at http://babelfish.altavista.com/cgi-bin/translate


Updates on Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Systems
Information Week on May 10, 1999, Page 26 elaborates its notices that SpeechWorks International has speech recognition
modules for ERP systems. For example, these modules can now be deployed in SAP.  See http://www.speechworks.com/

Some new features of PeopleSoft for academic advisement, admissions and recruitment, campus community, financial aid, student records, etc. are discussed in T.H.E. Journal, May 1999, p. 10. 

Some of the disappointments of companies that deployed SAP are reviewed in Information Week, May 24, 1999, pp.
59-68. The online version is available at http://www.informationweek.com/735/erp.htm .

For a comments of educators who have installed SAP or other ERP education modules in curricula, see
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosap.htm


Hi Bob,

I just ran across a fascinating article on paper-like electronic displays.

From the below referenced article:

"E Ink will use a dark liquid dye containing white particles that rise up and become visible in response to an electric field. The white particles create a reflective background, while the dark dye forms images. Initially, this principle will be applied in big panels that look like posters while functioning as giant video screens, suitable for point-of-sale advertising in retail stores. "We should have our first commercial products by the end of this year," Wilcox predicts. Joe Jacobson believes the system can be refined as a stack of "video pages" bound into a book powered by batteries in the spine. Plug the book into a telephone jack, and downloaded text will appear magically on the pages. Wilcox cautions, however, that this concept is at least five years away from realization."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-05/09/158l-050999-idx.html

My guess is that in 5 years we will have the above devices available and they will quickly become as popular as hand-held computers.

Neal Hannon Bus 401-232-6227
http://web.bryant.edu/~nhannon Fax 815-346-1735
FREE Newsletter= http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html

Life isn’t about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself.
~ George Bernard Shaw ~ (1856-1950, Irish-born British Dramatist)


This week from Neal Hannon

Here are this week’s hot topics:

1. Send AND Receive Faxes for Free.

2. Add a free stock ticker to your Web site.

3. What’s up with Cell Phones and Cancer?

4. Rate Your ISP. Time to find a new one?

5. Built a Y2K Crisis Center Yet?

6. NewsScan: Worth Thinking About

7. After-hours Trading is Here.

8. Planning a Wedding? A Must See Planning Site.

To read about the above items, go to the newsletter:
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html


From Phil Livingston (and Arthur Levitt):
Audit Committee Effectiveness - After receiving many input letters from members and then debating the issues again, our Committee on Corporate Reporting and the FEI Executive Committee issued FEI’s final position on the Blue Ribbon Panel’s Recommendations on Audit Committee Effectiveness. Here is a link to the final letter to SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt: http://www.fei.org/technical/blueriblet.html. The NY Times did an article on our position. The article itself was balanced, but as I’ve seen happen so many times the headline writers got us. Here is a link to the Times article as well. Type in "Financial Executives Institute" in parentheses in the keyword search (you’ll need to register if you haven’t already): http://archives.nytimes.com/archives/.

Phil Livingston, President and CEO
Financial Executives Institute
mailto:plivingston@fei.org


Hi Robert,
George Bodnar asked me to contribute a review of his Omnis Mus project, and said that you would collect and post those reviews.

I have used Omnis Mus for several semesters in our introductory financial accounting course. In my opinion, Omnis Mus is an excellent program for a course at that level. There are three reasons I prefer Omnis Mus to other programs I have used: a much better cost/benefit ratio that many programs with similar goals, the flexibility to change between debits/credits and increases/decreases to account balances, and a more realistic experience when compared to commercial accounting programs.

The primary reason I prefer Omnis Mus is that it offers a really good cost/benefit ratio. I adopted this program after trying others which were cost more and took much more time for students to complete. The program costs only $10, and my students reported an average completion time of about six hours. In comparison, previous programs had cost around $40 to $50 and had taken over twenty hours to complete. This relatively short time requirement allows me to include other important outside of class activities like group projects and an optional manual practice set without overburdening busy students.

A second reason I prefer Omnis Mus is that it allows students to prepare entries based either on debits and credits or on increases and decreases in account balances. This flexibility allows me to reduce the coverage of debits and credits in the course to a minimum, a great service to the non accounting major. Meanwhile, I recommend that accounting majors use the debit/credit mode to increase their comfort with making formal journal entries before more advanced classes.

The third reason I prefer Omnis Mus is that it interfaces with students in a professional manner that closely resembles commercial software. Students felt that some other programs, in their attempts to be interactive, became "cutesy." They appreciate being treated as adults while learning.

Barbara McElroy
Berry College

********************
Following my request that she also discuss some of the disadvantages, Barbara replied as follows:

Robert:
I understand your concern. I explain below what I saw as the primary disadvantages of Omnis Mus and why I did not include them in my original review. You have my permission to use this information as well, so long as you make it clear that these concerns may have been addressed.

The major disadvantages (when I used the program in the 1997/1998 school year) were two. On the students’ side, the program lacked documentation. Students with less computer experience thus found it difficult to install and use, though those with more experience had no such complaints. From my perspective, the need to deal with making copies, collecting payment, and remitting payment to George was a nightmare. I spoke to George about making it available through the bookstore and providing documentation but he was unwilling. The second semester of use, I had a computer science student develop documentation as a class project and had the computer lab make copies and collect payment, so all I had to do was mail one check to George . Complaints from students fell dramatically as well. I did not use Omins Mus this year, because my teaching assignment changed, but I understand that the program is now available on the Web, and has on-line support, so I did not include these disadvantages because they may be outdated.

Barbara McElroy

A listing of schools that have used Omnis Mus is provided at http://www.bus.duq.edu/faculty/bodnar/omnismus.html



And that's the way it was on June 4, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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May 28, 1999

For those poor souls who really want to keep me on file, please note my new phone numbers at the bottom of this message.   All phone numbers at Trinity University have replaced the 736 prefix with 999.  Like most people these days, I prefer email messages to phone calls, but there still is a telephone somewhere in my office --- "buried somewhere" I should have said.

Bob Jensen's Bookmarks (with a more efficient new look) are located at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm


Accounting educators and others attending the annual American Accounting Association meetings in San Diego in August should note that the Continuing Education Program (CEP) sessions are now listed at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm


Blatant bragging
Dear Bob,

My name is Laura Bergstrom and I am the assistant editor at AccountingNet’s Web site, www.accountingnet.com. AccountingNet is an online publisher of accounting news and research materials, visited by more than 100,000 viewers each month.

We recently added a feature to our site called, "AccountingNet’s Site of the Week." Each week, AccountingNet highlights one Web site that benefits the accounting industry and effectively utilizes technology. I am contacting you because we have selected your homepage as our next Site of the Week award winner!

Beginning May 24, we will highlight your Web site as our Site of the Week.

Please take a look at the write up by visiting this URL:

http://www.accountingnet.com/community/siteoftheweek/index.html. We have also created a Site of the Week graphic, which we welcome you to use on your Web site to highlight your award.

Again, congratulations and thank you for providing such a valuable online service. Instructions for using the graphic are attached below.

Best Regards,
Laura Bergstrom
Assistant Editor/Assistant Product Manager
AccountingNet
600 Stewart Street Suite #1101
Seattle, WA 98101
206.441.8285 ext. 237
laurab@accountingnet.com


Responses to questions about building Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) modules into business education curricula.  This includes responses of adopters of SAP, JD Edwards, and other ERP software.
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosap.htm

An article on the latest moves and strategies of ERP vendors can be found at
http://www.informationweek.com/733/portal.htm


Business research on the web or business people, academics, and investors offered by the online information provider Intellifact.com, Inc (includes book reviews)
http://www.intellifact.com/


City of University of Hong Kong Accounting and Corporate Law Centre
http://fbweb.cityu.edu.hk/ac/acl/


We hear a lot about paperless offices, paperless audits, paperless libraries, etc.  There is a fragile side of digital storage that is reviewed by Peter Coffee at
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,402267,00.html


The Future of Computing (Thank you to Neal Hannon for this link._
The Network World Fusion Newsletter if free.
http://www.nwfusion.com/news/1999/0503future.html

I registered on May 11 and was led to some interesting articles, including "Networks of the Future," By Neal Weinberg. 

1. Decline of the desktop.

Bob Metcalfe, Ethernet inventor and industry pundit, argues that 10 years from now, PCs will be the exception rather than the rule, "with Wintel machines only a bit more important than punched cards today." He sees PCs being knocked off their perch by network computers, Internet appliances (which would include anything from telephone-like devices to televisions), and nondesktop computers, such as enterprise servers and wearable computers.

2. The Internet will rule.

Ten years from now, at least half of all business transactions will take place online, predicts Ray Kurzweil, a pioneer in print-to-speech reading machines and speech recognition technology.

Issues such as security, authentication and quality of service (QoS) will all have been solved, says Internet guru Esther Dyson, chairman of EDventure Holdings in New York. The Internet will be "the basis of everything," she says.


100 (Commercial) Innovators of Internet Technology
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,402016,00.html


Thank you Phil Livingston
FEI information on SFAS 133
Phil says his comments here don’t do justice to the full letters and these complex subjects, so here is the link to the documents: http://www.fei.org/technical/g4resp1.doc and http://www.fei.org/technical/fas133.doc.

FAS 133 - Acct. for Derivatives - The FASB voted Wednesday to delay FAS 133 by one year. The new effective date is for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2000. An exposure draft will be available on Thursday or Friday on the FASB website (http://www.fasb.org) and will have a 30-day comment period. The amendment is expected to be issued by June 30. Companies that have already implemented FAS 133 will not be permitted to revert to the previous accounting. As I discussed in earlier FEI Express messages, we weighed in heavily on this subject, and I think we influenced the process in a positive way.

While this delay will provide for a better implementation of FAS 133, it is our duty to make the best use of the time. One of the reasons for the delay is to get all the implementation issues on the table and ruled on. As a group we need to very quickly identify all unanswered issues and have them clarified by the FASB’s "Derivatives Implementation Group" - known affectionately (sort of) by true accounting aficionados as the "DIG." FEI member Susan Schmidt Bies, executive vice president, First Tennessee National Corporation, is leading our committee on this matter. Your key problems and questions regarding FAS 133 should be sent to mailto:jluallen@fei.org and we will get them to Susan.
Phil Livingston


Shared courseware on Business Strategies
http://mars.wnec.edu/~achelte/bus680spring.htm

Worth Online’s Top 50 CEOs
http://www.worth.com/articles/Z9905C02.html


Philosophy Research Base
http://151.196.86.71/ http://www.erraticimpact.com/


Thank you Kibraim
IE 5.0 can be a pretty big nightmare, so CNet picked five horrific tales of terror and turned each one into a sweet dream:
http://www.cnet.com/Digdispatch/dispatch367.html


We really need more acronyms.  The latest is the marriage of XML with HTML that will conceive a baby named XHTML.  You can read about it in an article entitled "HTML is headed for marriage with HTML" at http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,2258806,00.html

"Microsoft Bets Big on XML," as claimed by Jeffrey Schwartz at http://www.internetwk.com/story/INW19990524S0001

"XML will revolutionize the usage of the Web to make it the business driver that it can be in terms of application integration and more advanced forms of e-commerce," said Paul Maritz, group vice president for Microsoft's developer group, who gave the keynote address at Microsoft's TechEd conference here today.

Bob Jensen's brief review of XML and RDF can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm


Upon returning home to nearly 500 email messages, I found a bunch of Mac users cursing Microsoft products.  Shame on you!  Microsoft is above reproach.  You can read more about lab tests of operating systems "The last word:  Shoot is out for the best operating system" by Eric Lindquist at http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,402419,00.html


Linux.com - it’s not going away even though Microsoft would prefer that Linux fades into the sunset.
http://www.linux.com/

Also see http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/filters/katt /


I just want to congratulate two of my former students (Sheridan Chambers, President/CEO & Tyson Weihs, Vice President/Operations) and who, along with another Trinity University graduate (Dan Cornell, Vice President/Software Engineering), formed an Internet solutions company (especially database installations) that is booming.  Another one of my students, Brian Clarke,  graduated in May and has now become the Chief Financial Officer.  This company is so successful that it now leases some of the most expensive office space in the tallest building in San Antonio.   Good work in this venture guys and congratulations on some new contracts from major companies like IBM!  I found your server to be a bit slow, but the web site has helpful information.
http://www.atension.com/main.html


This is a rather huge gamble for an association that wants to sell its major journal. Will the libraries catch on?
The full text version of forthcoming papers in the Journal of Finance can now be located easily and downloaded free from
http://www.afajof.org/forpaper.htm


News from or about Microsoft Corporation

The Los Angeles Times summary of innovations to be anticipated with Microsoft's Office 2000
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/ofnote/04-26latimes.htm

Check Out Office 2000’s Simplified Installation and File Repair
http://www.microsoft.com/insider/office2000/articles/filerepair.htm

Microsoft Press Launches Office 2000 Learning Resources
http://mspress.microsoft.com/office2000/books/

A message to CEOs from Bill Gates
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,1014718,00.html

Find out what’s new in Microsoft FrontPage 2000.
http://mspress.microsoft.com/news/features/

Running Microsoft Access 2000
http://mspress.microsoft.com/prod/books/2049.htm

Microsoft Product Insider: What’s New from Microsoft
http://www.microsoft.com/insider/new/default.htm

Baseball 2000 Trial Version
http://www.microsoft.com/sports/baseball2000/


Where do IT administrators and professionals shop online.  See
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,403285,00.html

The top pick was CDW at http://www.cdw.com/

The Big 8 are as follows:

Rank Web site Asset tracking
and
management
Original content information Extranet customization Detailed comparison shopping Automatic custom pricing updates
1 www.cdw.com
See profile
   

Blue.gif (84 bytes)

bullet

bullet

2 www.insight.com
See profile
   

bullet

 

bullet

3 www.necx.com
See profile

bullet

bullet

 

bullet

bullet

4 beyond.com
See profile

bullet

 

bullet

   
5 www.intraware.com
See profile

bullet

bullet

 

bullet

 
6 pcconnection.com
See profile
 

bullet

bullet

   
7 swspectrum.com
See profile
   

bullet

 

bullet

8 warehouse.com
See profile
   

bullet

 

bullet


The time for a PDA has finally arrived.  I'm going shopping for a Palm VII.   See
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,403829,00.html


Marketing Research Helpers
http://go.hotwired.com/webmonkey/99/18/index3a.html/eg1999183


If you really want secret email, there is are options described at
http://www.wired.com/news/news/email/explode-infobeat/technology/story/19804.html


There was a time in my life when I was really into the mathematics of AHP (analytic Hierarchy Processing).  My outdated stuff is listed at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/resume.htm#Published .  You can also download an unpublished paper of mine that questions the claimed superiority of eigenvector scaling.  See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default.htm#BigOnes .

Now Expert Choice offers a great deal in the way of software for AHP (although I think the pricing is rather absurd). 

TeamEC and ECPro Service Pack 4 Upgrades are available now!

If you are a current licensed user of Expert Choice version 9.5 software, you can download the latest maintenance release Service Pack 4 from our web site at http://www.expertchoice.com.


Radio without a radio
http://radio.lycos.com

Culture Finder
http://culturefinder.lycos.com


Telepolis --- a serious English/German journal on Internet culture and politics
http://www.heise.de/tp/english/


National Adoption Information Clearinghouse
http://www.calib.com/naic/


Genealogy Databases and Information
http://www.standard.net.au/~jwilliams/data.htm


Start your own listserv (Thank you for the tip on this one Eric Cohen)
http://www.onelist.com/


Vocabulary Builders
http://www.superkids.com/aweb/tools/words/


Although I still think Adobe Acrobat is a bad alternative for documents that have hot links to the web and internal bookmarks (because those links have to be rewired every time the document is revised), I use Version 4 of Acrobat for documents that have few or no links.  You can read about some of the really innovative enhancements (especially the web document capture feature) in Acrobat 4.0 that merited an Analyst’s Choice award from PC Week Labs.  See http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9905073/400884/


Official International Statistics on the Web
http://www.auckland.ac.nz/lbr/stats/OFFSTATSmain.htm

OFFSTATS lists web sites offering free and easily accessible social, economic and general data from official or similar "quotable" sources, especially those that provide both current data and time series. In the country lists, these are mainly web pages provided by statistical offices, central banks and government departments and agencies, whereas the topics list is comprised of links to the statistics pages of international organizations and associations and a few commercial sites. Annotations have been kept to a minimum as it is normally obvious from the name of the data collection or its source what kind of data can be expected. Many data are downloadable (html tables can normally be copied straight into worksheets), but pdf files can only converted using the full Adobe Acrobat package. The free Acrobat Reader which is required to view and print pdf files can be downloaded from most sites or from here. OFFSTATS aims to remain the most comprehensive and up-to-date list of its kind.


Home Mortgages and Refinancing (Real Estate)
http://mortgage.quicken.com/Tools/Refinance/RefiQuery.asp?Source=cnnfn


An enterprising high school senior claims that his Black Vault is the largest source of government documents outside the U.S. Government itself.  You be the judge at http://www.blackvault.com/

Welcome to The Black Vault, your premier source for government documents pertaining to a vast array of
subjects. You are entering a database that is one of a kind on the world of the Internet, and a database in
which you can not find anywhere else. The Black Vault is not much of a web site, but an online research
center for curious minds, students, and everyone alike. What is it? The Black Vault is a site created by myself,
John Greenewald, Jr. (a 17 year old Senior at Alemany High School), to better inform the public of what is
going on within the secret walls of the United States Government.


Let the Library tell you what books you should read in a lifetime
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/2375 /


Gone for Good:  Tales of University Life after the Golden Age
by Stuart Rojstacze
http://www.goneforgood.com/


OutsourcingAcademics
http://www.outsourcing-academics.com/


Bygone Women of the West Museum
http://www.wowmuseum.org/

Information, and services geared for midlife women
http://www.womenfirst.com/

And for younger women there is ePregnancy
http://ePregnancy.com/

And for Moxie Women there is
http://www.moxie.ca/


Shackleton’s Legendary Antarctic Expedition (history)
http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/shackleton/


Tips from Mosquitoes.com
http://www.mosquitoes.com/


Trivia Bytes
http://www.triviabytes.com/


Museums and galleries of the United Kingdom
http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/intro.htm


Virtual Ireland (lots of green)
http://www.virtualireland.com/


Photographs from the Golden Age of Jazz - 1938 to 1948.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/wghtml/


Battlefield: Vietnam (from PBS)
http://www.pbs.org/battlefieldvietnam/


Hans Namuth's portraits of rebel painters and poets
http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/namuth/


Icelandic horses, Langhus farm.  (More than horses)
http://www.krokur.is/~gudhall


Aquarium Fish
http://members.tripod.com/~aquarium_fish/fish.htm


Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood
http://www.pbs.org/rogers/


Lost Classics Book Company
http://www.lcbcbooks.com/


For a better understanding of the culture of India and the Hindu religion
http://www.si.edu/asia/devi/


Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
http://h2g2.com/


And a hitchhiker's guide to happy meals (is Bob Jensen two french fries short of a happy meal?)
McDonald’s Trip Planner --- whereas the AAA will plan your trips for a annual fee, you can get a trip planner complete with maps for free from
http://www.vicinity.com/mcdonalds/


The Foundation for Accounting Education is the education arm of the NYSSCPA. Our mandate is to provide quality education to CPAs in a cost effective manner. We are currently doing this in 3 divisions:

I am actively trying to develop self study programs delivered on-line or at least have the testing on-line. If you have any creative ideas for topic and/or deliver methods for self study I’d love to hear from you.

NYSSCPA is also the publisher of The CPA Journal. CPAJ is refereed and our editor, James Craig, is always looking for hot and interesting articles. He can be reached at 212-719-8350, jcraig@luca.com.

We have a variety of programs for students and CPA candidates. You can find out about these by calling Lorrie Lamazor, Director of Member Relations at 212-719-8390 or Joanne Barry, Director of Public Relations at 212-719-8354, jbarry@luca.com.

I personally have an interest in curriculum development and have volunteered to assist several NY schools with the development of new curriculum.

My personal background: I’m a CPA with approx. 20 years small public practice experience. I have an MA and am currently a doctoral candidate at NYU in Business Education.

If I can be of any further assistance just give a holler, or an e-mail.

Frimette Kass fkass@EXCHANGE.LUCA.COM
Director Foundation for Accounting Education
530 Fifth Avenue
NYC 10036
V: 212-719-8370 F: 212-719-8499


Hello Bob - You’ve been in touch with us in the past about resampling methods, so this announcement concerning a new book, a new course and a new discussion list may be of interest. For removal from this monthly update list just reply with "remove" (without the quotes) in the subject.

New book on resampling: Phillip Good’s "RESAMPLING METHODS: A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO DATA ANALYSIS."

Phillip Good (author of "Permutation Tests") covers permutation, bootstrap and other methods in his new book. Topics include one- and two-sample and variance comparisons; Pitman, smoothed, bias-corrected and iterated bootstrap; power analysis regression; Fisher’s Exact and odds ratio tests; exact significance levels, unordered r x c contingency and ordered statistical tables; survival analysis; and parametric vs. nonparametric resampling.

Cost - US$63.00. Add $5.00 for shipping to Canada, $15 outside North America. You may order this book "on approval" - return within 30 days if not suitable. In USA/Canada we will bill you; other orders must be prepaid by credit card or check.

To order, send email to stats@resample.com


From InformationWeek Online May 6, 1999
SpeechWorks International Inc. yesterday introduced the first speech-recognition applications that will let employees and customers access SAP applications by speaking over the phone. SpeechWorks unveiled software building blocks that let developers add speech-recognition capability to SAP’s Sales & Distribution, HR Employee Self-Service, and Customer Interaction Center modules.

Demand for speech-enabling SAP applications is strongest among customers already implementing other speech-recognition applications, according to SpeechWorks. The sales module lets sales representatives and customers determine the status of customer accounts, product availability and pricing, and sales-order placement. People can also speak to the applications to place and confirm orders. The HR module lets employees speak to access information about benefits, salaries, paychecks, travel expenses, time reporting, and personal information.

SpeechWorks for SAP will be available from SpeechWorks early in the third quarter. SpeechWorks will deliver similar software for PeopleSoft Inc. and other enterprise resource planning vendors around year’s end.

For SAP definitions, go the the "S" section of my Technology Glossary at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm .


"Corporate Universities: Just-in-Time Learning" by Michael D. Kull
Horizon, 7-2
http://metalab.unc.edu/horizon/index.html

Kull examines the goals and operations of corporate universities, one permutation of the general trend toward an expanded and diversified education market. "Instead of relying on the country’s education system to furnish packaged solutions in the form of new graduates," he writes, many "organizations want education to be delivered to the right people at the right time in the right way: just-in-time." For some corporations, the "right" solution is an independent, company-run university. For others, it is an educational alliance with an existing university; consequently, educators should pay more attention to the business market and to how traditional brick-and-mortar institutions can better serve it. After all, Kull reminds readers, "partnering represents the next step in the evolution of a knowledge economy."

The next step is already here in accounting given the partnerships mentioned at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm
Note the discussion of some of the partnering controversies in the above document.



And that's the way it was on May 28, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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May 11, 1999

This is a short special edition of New Bookmarks devoted to my comments on articles appearing in the May 1999 issue of Syllabus.  The May issue is not yet available online, but I suspect that it will be online in a matter of days at http://www.syllabus.com/ .   This is one of the best issues ever published by Syllabus.  Among other things, it contains articles that thread back into some of the recent editions of my New Bookmarks.  Remember that I am leaving for Iowa at noon and will not be near a computer until May 26.  Subscribers to the aecm will have to carry on their debates without me for a while.  That's good!  Perhaps this is a good time for newcomers to speak out.

Bob Jensen's Bookmarks (with a more efficient new look) are located at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm


In the April 30 Edition (http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book99.htm#043099) of New Bookmarks, I asserted that the top business schools have exhibited very little leadership in experimenting with education technologies and accounting faculty in those top schools have virtually been invisible in this paradigm shift in education.  In a "Special Feature" entitled "Distance Learning in Research 1 Institutions:  Recommendations and Strategies," Syllabus, May 1999, 28-30, the Dean for the Extended University at the University of Arizona, Don Olcott, challenges all Research 1 (R1) schools to strive for a better balance between tradition and technological innovations.  On Page 28, he writes the following:

R1s, more than any other of our higher education institutions, should be our strongest advocates that technology should enhance teaching and improve learning.  R1s have an abundance of trained researchers who can tie teaching, research, and technology to quality and excellence.

Later, on Page 30, he writes:

But before we condemn the faculty for this disconcerting posture towards change that emanates from R1 institutions and universities in general, let us remember that these institutions have served our society effectively and nobly for decades.  The traditions, policies, rewards, and infrastructures . . ."

Dr. Olcott makes various recommendations for change in the R1 institutions.  I hope that leaders in those institutions will follow some of his advice.  He does not mention that one of the most difficult hurdles for the very top research universities to surmount is their own success.  With their resources and esteemed reputations, they can attract top faculty and top students without enormous innovations and changed infrastructures and reward systems.

Last week on the PBS show Computer Chronicles was devoted to excerpts from speeches of the top executives of Microsoft and Sun Microsystems.  Bill Gates reminded the audience that the biggest collapses of top technology firms (Wang, Deck, Apple, etc.) began at the height of the successes of those firms.  This is in fact his nightmare as founder and CEO of Microsoft.  I am not contending that our top business schools are going to "collapse" in the technology paradigm shifts.   What I am recommending, however, is that they do not let their current successes make them complacent to the paradigm shift.  Dr. Olcott, among others, is urging the R1 institutions in general to change with the times.  Near the end of his special feature article, he urges R1 institutions to change with "greater expediency."   In a matter of days you should be able to find his article at http://www.syllabus.com/ .

I might add that some R1 universities have undertaken some significant technological innovations in accounting education.  Off the top of my head, I can recall some of the early and on-going efforts at Arizona State University, Notre Dame, Delaware, and others that I could think of if it wasn't so early in the morning.  However, among the top business schools ranked by U.S. News, I am not aware of technology in education leadership by accounting faculty.  For example, US News rates Stanford at Rank 1 and Harvard at Rank 2 among leading  business schools ranked  at http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/beyond/gradrank/mba/gdmbat1.htm .  In my somewhat dated survey, both Stanford and Harvard accounting faculty reported no technological innovations in accounting education.  See http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/survey1.htm    In fairness, there may be some more recent happenings among accounting faculty at top business schools that I have not yet gotten wind of out here in the boon docks.  Certainly the R1 schools have been innovative in using computer technologies in accounting research.


Hypertext is a term going as far back as1947.  It is a rather misleading term depicting digitized text that can be navigated nonlinearly with hot words and navigation buttons.  When other media (graphics, animations, audio, and video) are added to the text, the term becomes hypermedia.  One of the early pioneers was Neil Larson who eventually produced hypertext software under the product name "MaxThink."   However, the major players in this arena evolved from firms that negotiated enormous contracts for training in the U.S. Military and large corporations.  Before the days of the Internet, these firms wrote heavy blocks of code for hypertext authoring and complete course management systems (testing, grading, etc.).  Some of the firms eventually boxed up their software and attempted to sell these "courseware authoring packages."  In 1994, Petrea Sandlin and I wrote a book on the paradigm shift in education technology.  In Chapter 3 of Jensen and Sandlin (1994), we summarized over 60 vendors of "courseware authoring packages."  You can download Chapter 3 and the other chapters in PDF format from http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245cont.htm#1994

Us old timers in this game recall such course authoring packages as Authorware, ToolBook, Quest,  TourGuide, LessonBuilder, TenCore, CourseBuilder, TIE, Peak, Icon Author, HyperCard, SuperCard, HyperPad, HyperTies, StoryBoard Live, Linkway, Guide, HyperWriter, Instant Replay, ScriptX, MaxThink, Grasp, Digital Chisel, PC Interact, Act II, Authority, StrataVision, HSC InterActive, Mac Presents, ImageQ, Producer Pro, EyeQ, Gain Momentum, mPower, InterText, Viper Write, and many others.  I spent several years of my life writing course modules in a course management system called HyperGraphics.  Most of the course authoring packages are dead and buried after having very short lives in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Before getting to my main point, I would like to ask a few trivia questions.

And now for my main point.  In May 1999, Syllabus on pp. 33-34 lists seven leaders in multimedia authoring tools.  After dropping off Macromedia Director and several others for being mainly multimedia authoring tools but not courseware authoring software, I identify three noteworthy survivors for courseware authoring.   These are as follows:

These products are not especially profitable to their companies and within the firms they are the most expensive to develop and upgrade.  The firms do, however, make a significant amount of money developing training courses using their own products.   Therein lies the problem --- these packages require expert consultants.  These products were originally too complicated for most college faculty to get excited about and very few colleges purchased site licenses to develop courses using the above packages.   Some that did buy site licenses abandoned the efforts after faculty got bogged down in learning how to use the packages. 

The revised packages listed above, however, are much more user friendly.  ToolBook II Instructor is not user friendly, so Asymetrix developed ToolBook II Assistant with user friendliness in mind.  Quest uses "an approachable, reusable, and extensible object-oriented architecture" featuring FastTrack libraries of "pre-built screen layouts, buttons, and interactions" in a WYSIWYG layout.  (Syllabus, May 1999, p. 34).  Macromedia claims:  "No experience is required to create highly interactive, media-rich courseware with full features such as hyperlinks, hypertext, text search, and retrieval ..." (Syllabus, May 1999, p. 33).  

Time will tell as to whether the above remnants of the many courseware authoring packages will flourish or fall on the ash heap of the many goners listed in our Chapter 3 at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245cont.htm#1994 .


The future of courseware authoring packages listed above is clouded by the emergence of server shells written for course authoring and management.  Many of these shells were home grown by technicians at various universities (e.g., WebCT began at the University of British Columbia, Blackboard began at Cornell University, and Mallard began at the University of Illinois.)  These and other shells are described at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245soft1.htm

In my travels I am hearing more and more good things about Blackboard.  On Page 16 of Syllabus, May 1999 you will find mention of five beta sites for the Blackboard Campus, "a turnkey, enterprise level online course-management system for higher education."  The beta sites are as follows:

I guess my question now is whether the server shells will drive the coffin nails into former courseware authoring systems such as Authorware, Quest, and ToolBook.  It is too early to tell, but the shells seem to be winning on college and university campusesKeep in mind, however, that shells to date are not as good for multimedia authoring as the older courseware authoring packages.  For example, one of the really neat things I like about ToolBook is the way I can store an audio or video file on a CD-ROM and then take as many clips as I want from any part of the file.  I doubt whether you can do this with any shell software to date.


In private correspondence some time ago, Dan Gode raised the question of the value of multimedia in learning, especially learning of accounting.  I think the jury is still out on the multimedia issue.  One problem in doing research on such matters is that the technology of multimedia keeps changing.  The May 1999 issue of Syllabus has four review articles of the changing times in multimedia and visualization in learning.


One of the most intriguing articles in the May 1999 issue of Syllabus is entitled "Visual Language:  Conveying Information in Instruction and on the Web."  The heart of this article is an interview with Bob Horn, the author of a new book entitled Global Communication for the 21st Century described at http://www.academic.com/ .  The basic topic is visual mapping of information into a revolutionary way thinking about communication and learning.  You can read the following at http://www.macrovu.com/VLBkAboutTheBook.html :

Horn argues that this new language growing up around us is a prelude to far-reaching changes in the very manner in which we will communicate in the next century. He notes that the creation of visual language emerges from people around the world inventing components out of necessity to communicate about the ever-increasing complexity of our lives. Visual language is being synthesized from previously separate vocabularies as diverse as computer flow charts, business process diagrams, and cartoons and animation. It has grown and spread organically and globally in ways that artificially created international languages-like Esperanto, which was invented by a single person-have never done. In a significant sense, it is already an international language of technology, science, and business.

. . . this book is not only a pathfinding and provocative treatise, it is the first to use visual language itself to describe and analyze that language. By his use of visual language on every page, Horn demonstrates that it is an immensely flexible and effective communication tool and one that invites and delights us.  Readers will not only learn about visual language, but will have the full experience of total immersion. They will experience what Horn calls a new multi-modal process of reading, simultaneously demanding and rewarding. (emphasis added)


What is really interesting about Horn's work above is the question of how visualization of information will play into the rapidly growing revolution in database networking that is arriving via XML and RDF.  I downloaded the paper entitled "The Electronic Dissemination of Accounting Information - Resource Discovery, Processing, and Analysis" by Roger Debreceny, Glen Gray, and Tony Barry.  I must say that I was impressed.  I recommend that all of you contact one of these authors for a copy.   In particular you may request a copy from Glen at glen.gray@csun.edu or Roger at rogerd@netbox.com .

In his prompt email reply to my request for a copy of the paper, Glen requested that I comment about how to improve the paper.  The paper is excellent, but one thing I would like to see added is a discussion of how visual mapping will play into this entire paradigm shift in web communication.  Recall that you can read about visual mapping at http://www.academic.com/


There is so much to learn and so little time to do it in, that I guess I will sign off and go fishing in Minnesota.  Bye for now.



And that's the way it was on May 11, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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May 7, 1999

Accounting educators and others attending the annual American Accounting Association meetings in San Diego in August should note that the Continuing Education Program (CEP) sessions are now listed at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm

In my viewpoint, the CEP sessions have become more important than the sessions in the main program.  Last year I even registered my video camera for a CEP session that I could not attend because of a conflict with another session.   Thank you Erika for running the camera for me.  The main advantage of a CEP program is that there are 4-8 hours to develop a topic in depth rather than 45 minutes or less allotted to speakers on varied topics in the main sessions. 

I would like to especially thank Pete Mazany for agreeing to participate in two CEP sessions.  Pete is flying in from New Zealand at his own expense to share his enormous expertise in network simulation and team dynamics developments in education (business strategy, finance, accounting, economics, marketing, etc.)  Pete has a Ph.D. in simulation and game theory from Yale University and has consulted with leading international consulting firms before returning to the University of Auckland.  In addition, Pete is the founder and CEO of the company (Active Learning Online) that developed the highly innovative netMike and soloMike learning simulations and team dynamics at http://www.netmike.com/ .  You can read more about Pete at http://www.business.auckland.ac.nz/departments/msis/staff/p.mazany/ .  Among other things, Pete helped form and coordinate the teams that won the America's Cup for New Zealand in 1995.

Pete Mazany will be presenting on August 14 CETA CEP Session 1 and the August 15 CEP Session 37 described at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm .  Other leading-edge innovators will also make multimedia presentations in those sessions.   Most of the speakers and topics differ in Session 1 versus Session 37 such that duplication is minimized for persons choosing to attend both workshops.  I plan to minimize my presentations in these workshops in order to give more time to the four other speakers in Session 1 and three other speakers in Session 37.  By clicking on the workshop titles, you can read about the speakers, content, and other details of these and other workshops at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/cpelist.htm

Hotel and AAA Annual Meeting information can be found at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/99annual/meeting99.htm


Bob Jensen's Technology Glossary (along with links to assorted accounting, finance, business, and technology glossaries) have a new look with only minor revisions.    The web link is http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm


Bob Jensen's Full Set of Bookmarks has a new look with some rather major revisions.   The Full Set file became enormous and very slow to download.  I broke it into four files.  You will now find a frame document with those four files plus two files for the 1998 and 1999 editions of New Bookmarks.  This results in a choice of six files in the Full Set that can be loaded into the top frame.  The good news is that loading a subset of bookmarks will be much faster.  The bad news is that, when searching for a key word, you may have to load several files in succession.  Other good news includes my addition of some more of my New Bookmarks to the full set.   Other bad news is that loading all the New Bookmarks into the full set of indexed bookmarks will take some more of my time.  In any case, you can check out the Full Set at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm .


One of our local television stations in San Antonio recommended the Private Citizen web site for reducing the amount of junk phone calls and junk mail that you would like to halt.  The Wall Street Journal has also recommended this web site.
http://www.privatecitizen.com/


Yugoslavia & Kosovo (from Anthro.net)
http://home1.gte.net/ericjw1/yugoslavia.html


Note that I have now made the Web Trust case solutions available

Recall that I previously provided you with some Web Trust cases without case solutions at
http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/262wp/262case1.htm .  You can now link to the solutions from the cases themselves.   Also see Jensen, Howland, and Sidlinger solutions at http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/caselist.htm#98 .

Neal Hannon clued me in to the following discussion of the American AICPA and Canadian CICA joint efforts to market their WebTrust seals.  The tile of the article is:  "Security seals aim to battle lack of confidence in E-commerce. But will there be too many?"  http://www.globetechnology.com/gam/News/19990429/TWTRUST.html


One of the most fascinating things that I learned during my visit to Temple University was the progress the WHYY Philadelphia television station is making toward two-way interactive wireless distance education using high definition television (HDTV).   I now refer to WHYY as the digital entertainment and education dome over the Delaware Valley.
http://www.whyy.org/education
http://whyy.org/campaign/index.html

HDTV in many ways overcomes the bandwidth problem and students will eventually be able to see each other in full screen, full motion video across the WHYY wireless HDTV system.  But lest you get too excited about this tremendous advance in wireless technology, my computer science friends (thank you Aaron, Gerald and John) remind me about the "lost bit" problem with HDTV.  You may not notice the lost bits when viewing each other from afar, listening to students throughout the Delaware Valley discuss cases as if they were in the same classroom, and watching your instructor's visual aids wirelessly from miles away.  But you will curse the lost bits when you try to transmit a database or receive data whizzing across a HDTV wireless.    HDTV cannot fully replace hard wired fiber optic cable, because HDTV has a lost bits parity problem.  I guess there is still hope for all those heavy duty digging machine operators eager to tear up our streets and lawns to bring the Internets 1 and 2 to our schools, businesses, and homes.


XML Update (Revenge from the Nerds)  from InformationWeek
IBM released two Extensible Markup Language development tools on its Alphaworks Web site yesterday and launched a search site for finding XML resources on the Web. The moves are part of the company’s strategy to promote XML as a standard for exchanging data among Web applications.

IBM’s XML for C++ parser is a C++ version of its XML for Java parser, which more than 60,000 users have downloaded since its release last year. The C++ version lets developers give C and C++ applications the ability to read and write XML data without a lot of programming. It brings XML abilities to a large installed base of apps written before the release of Java. "It will enable XML to be used in a broader set of environments," says Marie Wieck, director of technology in IBM’s network computing software division.

IBM’s XML Security Suite lets developers build applications that stamp XML documents with digital signatures, which assure a sender and receiver that a document wasn’t altered during transmission. The suite is based on an IBM-developed specification called DOM-Hash, which the company is circulating among users and standards bodies for feedback. IBM plans to extend its security suite to encrypt individual data elements in XML documents, letting developers provide access only to portions of documents.

Commercial use licenses for XML for C++ parser are available through IBM’s Alphaworks Web site. The XML Security Suite is available for evaluation only.

***For more on XML, see "XML: Revenge of the Nerds"
http://www.techweb.com/se/directlink.cgi?NWC19990405S0007


The Journal of Accountancy becomes more hi tech each year.  A feature article on XML appears in the May edition.  See "The XML Files:  In the 21st Century Economy, XML is the Way You Will Move Information," by C. Hoffman, C. Kurt, and R. Koreto, Journal of Accountancy, May 1999, 71-77.  This is a nice review article of XML progress to date and predictions of its importance to the practice of accountancy.  The latest editions of the Journal of Accountancy are not available for several months.  Eventually, however, they are archived at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/joaiss.htm


Message from Eric Cohen
XML - the eXtensible Markup Language - is being hailed as the Next Big Thing in data transfer. Every major software developer has stated that XML is due to be the core of their future business information systems. I am working with a task force for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) that is in the process of developing the definitions, or schemas, that will define the structure of financial accounting data so it can be transferred between disparate systems or presented to meet the needs of the financial reporting community. These XML files can be transformed between chart of accounts structures, into trial balances or financial statements, used for ratio analyses, and have many other uses.

We are seeking input from the worldwide CPA/CA, academic, and developer communities, and anyone else who would be impacted by the standards that facilitate universal financial data transfer, on what the elements of this structure should be, and identifying those who wish to take part in this process.

Eric E. Cohen, CPA
xmlproject@computercpa.com

Don't forget Bob Jensen's overview at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm#RDF


Hi Thomas,

I hope you are doing well. In response to your financial ratio question, I am afraid that I do not know of a free site that maintains company profiles and industry profiles for a complete set of ratios. Most services charge for this service, although some services provide a few free ratios and other indicators.  Beware of ratio definitions.  As you well know, there are various ways to compute almost any financial ratio.  Naive analysts may be comparing apples and oranges when looking at values of any ratio.

ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE LINKS

Thanks to Chris Nolan I found a pretty good free web site for company and company-to-industry comparison ratios at http://www.financialweb.com/  . Click on the research tab in at that web site and enter a symbol like IBM.

Chris also recommended http://www.stockpoint.com/ .  Enter a symbol or company name such as IBM.  Get the Quote for that company.  Then click on the Company Profile button to see some ratios. 

Another free web site that I recommend is  http://www.investorguide.com/cgi-bin/research.cgi
After searching on a particular company's symbol (try IBM), you will find a Market Guide link.
Alternately, you can begin with Market Guide at http://www.marketguide.com/mgi/snap/4741N.html or http://Yahoo.marketguide.com  .
Users should carefully examine the Market Guide Glossary at http://yahoo.marketguide.com/mgi/HELP/glossary.html .  A possible exercise for students is to have them verify (for selected companies and selected ratios) the Market Guide calculations.

My next recommendation is to go to http://www.natcorp.com/framedirectory.html . By entering a company's stock symbol, you can get all sorts of links, including that company's profile and fundamentals links. The "Company Data" path at this web site leads to http://www.natcorp.com/traded.html

ABC News has some quick and very limited company information for free at http://webapp.abcnews.com/profiles/abc_comp_profiles.asp

If you want to look up a company's annual report online, a very good annual report directory is located at
http://www.reportgallery.com/content/glry_a.htm .  Of course there are some good SEC links at

EDGAR Database
at http://www.sec.gov/edgarhp.htm
EDGARSCAN from PriceWaterhouseCoopers at http://bamboo.tc.pw.com/edgarscan.html
(quicker response time)
Free EDGAR  at http://www.freeedgar.com/

For a fee, you can get more complete company and industry profiles at http://www.wsrn.com . This is a very good service but some good things in life are not free.

If you are interested in online financial analysis, I highly recommend some of Larry Tomassini's great links.

Tomassini's CorpOnline at http://www.cob.ohio-state.edu/~tomassin/corps/corp.html

Tomassini's Financial Analysis Online http://www.cob.ohio-state.edu/~tomassin/fanon.html

Jim Borden mentioned the Deloitte & Touche web site at
http://www.peerscape.com/member/index.cfm
I found the above server to be painfully slow.  However, Jim's recommendations should always be taken seriously.

MACRO ECONOMICS LINKS (including data classified by industry)

Last year I shared a platform with David Boldt at an education technology conference at Bentley College. David has a great web site for economists, particularly in the area of macroeconomics. His materials are listed at http://www.westga.edu/~dboldt

If you are looking for industry and economic statistics. one place to begin searching is at http://econwpa.wustl.edu/EconFAQ/USMacro/index.html

The above web site leads to a heap of macro data, but you were more interested in industry ratios. A bit of searching from the above site led me to a University of Michigan site at
http://www.lib.umich.edu/libhome/Documents.center/stats.html

There are various industry categories at the above web site. The Business and Industry button led me to the FedStats web site at http://www.fedstats.gov

Another good set of Federal Government links can be found at
http://www.sec.gov/others.htm

An interesting personal finance web site (among the thousands available) is at
http://www.cncurrency.com
Not much in the way of ratio data at that web site, but you will find a variety of interesting documents and links.


Reply from Thomas,
Thanks to everyone who responded to my request for information about industry financial ratios on the Web. After reviewing several sites, I decided to settle with the following:

Yahoo Market Guide: http://Yahoo.marketguide.com .

If you enter a company’s Name or Ticker Symbol in the "Search For" field and then click GO and then Comparison, you will not only obtain financial ratios for the company you have searched for, but you will also find ratios for (1) the company’s industry, (2) the economic sector in which the company operates, and (3) the S&P 500. Other items that you may view about a selected company include:

A Snapshot of the company
Stock Market Quotes
Recent News about the company
Custom Price Charts (this is very interesting)
Highlights
Analysts’ Earnings Estimates and buy/sell recommendations
Market Performance data and summary of institutional ownership
Financial ratio Comparisons—Industry, Sector, S&P 500
Insider Trading
Instit. Ownership
Financials

I plan to use this site for a class project in which students are required to analyze/evaluate a small number of companies. Although it "works", I am concerned about the underlying source and reliability of the numbers and other information that appear at this and other similar sites. Are there any unpublished or published studies on this issue?

Thomas G. Calderon, Professor
G. W. Daverio School of Accountancy
College of Business Administration
The University of Akron
Akron, OH 44325-4802
Tel: (330) 972-6099
Fax: (330) 972-8597
mailto:tcalderon@uakron.edu


The Education Alliance Network provides, free of cost, the materials for colleges and universities to expose college-level students to financial management software, helping them gain hands-on experience to real-world technologies.
http://www.gps.com/ean/


Thank you ANet for this lead
Falkner and Gray's ElectronicAccountant
http://www.electronicaccountant.com/

New York (April 28, 1999) -- If you liked WebTrust, you’ll love SysTrust. That may not be a new marketing phrase of the American Institute of CPAs, but the AICPA is putting the finishing touches on a new assurance service.  President Barry Melancon says that the AICPA will roll out the SysTrust program soon, according to the April issue of Accounting Technology magazine.   Melancon has not provided details about the new program, except to describe it as a program in which CPAs will validate the reliability of computer systems.   "We’ve got to bring out new services to win the marketplace game," says Melancon, arguing that such programs are necessary to get the public to look to CPAs as providers of technology services.  WebTrust is a program through which specially trained CPAs certify that a Web site adheres to customer-service standards and delivers products or services in accordance with the company’s own representations.

You will find some WebTrust cases at http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/262wp/262case1.htm .  You can now link to the solutions from the cases themselves.   Also see Jensen, Howland, and Sidlinger solutions at http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/caselist.htm#98 .


Also thank you ANet for this message about the International Federation of Accountants:

IFAC has spearheaded the organization of a Forum on the Development of the Accountancy Profession, bringing together various development banks and agencies to determine how best to provide assistance in emerging nations and coordinate resources. The Forum’s goal is to promote understanding by national governments of developing countries about the value of transparent financial reporting by a strong accountancy profession. The Forum will also assist in defining expectations as to how the accounting profession should carry out its responsibilities to support the public interest in these countries.  http://www.ifac.org/


TO SUBSCRIBE to the ANet:  (I highly recommend this for accountants and accounting educators)

1. send an email message to: listname-request@listserv.csu.edu.au Substitute for "listname" the name of the particular list to which you wish to subscribe. Don’t forget the word "request". For example, to subscribe to ANEWS address your message to ANEWS-L-request@listserv.csu.edu.au

2. In the SUBJECT line type: subscribe
Make sure this is in the subject line and not in the body of the message!! Note that complete archives of the lists are held at http://www.csu.edu.au/anet/lists/


Links to this week's headline news (Accounting, Business, Personal Investing, Internet, Software)
http://www.accountingstudents.com/news/headlines/index.html


A while back I provided some links to higher education data in response to a query by Dan Gode.  I would like to add the following reference site to educational data.(The International Archive of Education Data)
http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/IAED/

INFOBITS recommends the following educational data sources:
Education Statistics Quarterly
Each issue includes short publications, summaries, and descriptions that cover all NCES publications and data products released during a three-month period. http://nces.ed.gov/pubs99/quarterlyapr/index.html [HTML format] or http://nces.ed.gov/pubs99/1999626.pdf [PDF format, requires Adobe Acrobat Reader]

Learning About Education Through Statistics
A brochure that provides general information about NCES surveys and how to access data from NCES. http://nces.ed.gov/pubs99/1999028.pdf [PDF format, requires Adobe Acrobat Reader]

Directory of NAEP Publications
The most comprehensive listing of government-funded NAEP publications dating as far back as the project’s inception in 1969. http://nces.ed.gov/pubs99/1999489.pdf


What’s the difference between distance learning and traditional classroom-based instruction? This question has become increasingly prominent as technology has made distance learning much more common. This report reviews a broad array of research and articles published in the last decade to determine the overall quality of the analysis, the gaps in the research, and the implications of the research for the future. The report finds that the overall quality of the research is questionable and thereby renders many of the findings inconclusive. Numerous gaps in the research require more investigation and information. These gaps include the fact that the research: emphasizes student outcomes for individual courses rather than for a total academic program; does not adequately explain why the dropout rates of distance learners are higher; does not address the quality of digital “libraries”; and does not take into account differences among students in how they learn. Implications of the research findings on college access and the “human factor” in learning also are included.   See the full report at
http://www.ihep.com/PUB.htm


The advent of the World Wide Web and the advancement of sophisticated computer software and hardware have created a surging online learning industry. The vision of students collecting certificates or degrees without ever setting foot in a classroom has captured the imagination of education entrepreneurs and Wall Street investors. This report reviews recent developments in information technology and distance learning, and how they combine with economic forces to fuel a global market for higher education. The report focuses especially on the question of access: Will the “virtual university” expand opportunities for those who have traditionally been underrepresented in higher education? The report concludes that emerging technologies may, in fact, deepen the divide between educational haves and have-nots, and that the marketplace will not fix the problem. Public policy must intervene to narrow the digital divide between whites and minorities, the wealthy and the less advantaged.  Download the full copy of this report from http://www.collegeboard.org/policy/html/virtual.html


Dear Professor Jensen,
If possible, would you please update the contact information for Dr. Gleim and Gleim Publications, Inc. on your web site?
Our new area code in Gainesville is (352) instead of (904) and our web site is at www.gleim.com.
Thank you very much on behalf of Dr. Gleim and the company for providing information about us on your site.  Also, we are in the midst of preparing some online study materials if you are interested.
Travis Moore


A ZD Net course on business strategy for the Internet
http://www.zdu.com/catalog/deptcatalog.asp?DepID=15&Sort=&CourseID=5616#5616


Sad but true from PC Week --- Bill Gates wins another one.
Sun’s long-standing plans to submit its Java language for standardization via ISO are dead and Microsoft is at fault, says Alan Baratz, president of Sun’s Java Software division.
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9904293/1014537/


News from  and/or about Microsoft

Packaging Your Content with the Windows Media Rights Manager (you can encrypt your files and control users' rights)
http://msdn.microsoft.com/workshop/imedia/windowsmedia/drm.asp

Download New Deployment Tools from the Office 2000 Resource Kit
http://www.microsoft.com/office/ork/

Microsoft to Participate in Developing Future Internet
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/04-28i2c.htm

microsoft.com and Your Privacy
http://register.microsoft.com/regwiz/include/privacy.htm

Preview new FrontPage 2000 with a 45-day trial for only $6.95 (US)*. To learn more details, including how to place your order, go to:  http://www.microsoft.com/frontpage/preview/2000/

The Journal of Accountancy becomes more hi tech each year.  A feature article on technology appears in the May edition.   See "Accounting --- the Digital Way," by Scott Boggs, Journal of Accountancy, May 1999, 99-198.  This is a nice review article of happenings at Microsoft Corporation.  The latest editions of the Journal of Accountancy are not available for several months.  Eventually, however, they are archived at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/joaiss.htm


Thank you Curtis
The Internet: Which Future for Organised Knowledge, Frankenstein or Pygmalion?
http://www.wolfson.ox.ac.uk/~floridi/frank.htm


The Journal for MultiMedia History (From SUNY Albany)
http://www.albany.edu/jmmh/


InformationWeek adds some further doubts to my previous concerns about ERPs such as SAP and BaanHowever Baan did "rebound slightly."

Struggling enterprise software vendor Baan Co. rebounded slightly today as it reported better-than-expected first-quarter results. Revenue for the quarter ended March 31 was $176 million, compared with $179 million in last year’s first quarter. The net loss for the quarter was $19 million, or 9 cents per diluted share, compared with $2 million, or 1 cent per diluted share, in the same period last year. Analysts were expecting a loss of about 11 cents per share.

http://www.informationweek.com/731/baan.htm


On May 5, 1999 InformationWeek Online casts further doubt upon the future of ERPs:

J.D. Edwards has hit hard times as the demand for ERP software remains stagnant. The company said yesterday it
expects an operating loss of more than $25 million for its second quarter, ended April 30. Company officials blame the 
anticipated shortfall on lower-than-expected license fee revenue, the impact of headcount additions made in the first fiscal 
quarter, investments in product development, and a $2.1 million write-off as a result of the acquisition of the Premisys Corp.
According to preliminary results, J.D. Edwards expects to report total second-quarter revenue in the range of $215 million
 to $235 million, which represents approximately a 3% to 12% increase over revenue of $209 million in the same period last year. License fee revenue is projected to be in the range of $60 million to $65 million. The company says revenue was adversely impacted by a general slowdown in demand for enterprise software as companies focus on year 2000 readiness. Final results for the quarter will be released on May 26.
Brent Thill, a financial analyst with Credit Suisse First Boston Corp., says the shortfall in license revenue is attributable to 
a slippage of new customer orders in the United States. He adds that J.D. Edwards' win rate against market leaders SAP 
and Oracle fell to 30% from 50% six months 
ago.
You can read more about ERP alternatives by looking up SAP in my Technology Glossary at
 http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm 

Hi Bob,
http://ashok.pair.com/ is a great site about PowerBuilder, Java, SQL, RDBMS, and OOP. It might come in handy one day.
Thanks,
Christina B. Kulick
V/T Systems Analyst
USAA Newco Document Services
(210) 913-6050 cell  (210) 753-6050 pager
christina.kulick@usaa.com

Notes from Bob Jensen
You can also read about such things at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm

Also see "Sneaking Up On CORBA: The Race for the Ideal Distributed Object Model," at http://www.networkcomputing.com/1009/1009f2.html

The most elegant component model in the world is useless without products to support it. By the same token, the most well-designed architecture is hamstrung without powerful yet flexible and usable tools with which to implement real-world solutions. These conundrums are influencing the future of the three prevailing models for using and managing distributed objects in a network: CORBA, DCOM and Enterprise JavaBeans.


Did you know that there are over 1,600 radio and TV stations broadcasting live in RealAudio and RealVideo? The hard part is finding all of them. With vTuner Plus, you have instant access to more than 1,600 radio and TV stations from around the world. Try it from RealNetworks for about $15.
http://www.realstore.com/specials/tuning.html

ListenToTheNews.com
http://listentothenews.com/


UPS opened up a nearby substation just for our house.  When we are having guests, finding our house is easy --- follow the brown trucks.
Don't let my wife know about this one:  Free catalogs at http://www.1freeplace.com/j4l/crc.htm

Yeah, and keep this one secret as well
Crate and Barrel - for your home --- http://www.crateandbarrel.com/


My featured accounting educator this week is Linda M. English, Department of Accounting HO4, University of Sydney NSW 2006, Australia at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/facdev/teaching/submissions/english.htm

The innovation nominated for the AAA Innovation in Accounting Education Award is primarily concerned with the enhancement of literacy skills in a large 1st year accounting course via the tutorial component of the course. Each week there are two lectures to introduce new material delivered to over 250 students at a time; one workshop containing about 70 students and a self-taught computer component to reinforce technical competence. To help students grasp content, interactive lecture notes are prepared to reduce the amount of student note-taking and increase the time spent by the lecturer explaining the material and answering questions. The purpose of the weekly tutorial is to enable consideration and discussion of underlying principles and the application of theory to practice. It is the site in which the development of literacy skills, takes place. Tutorials contain a maximum of 20 students. It is in the tutorial program that the curriculum redesign includes the subject of the nomination, takes place. First year accounting is a two semester course.


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week, I feature
Instructor:  Donald Raun
Institution:  California State University, Northridge
Course Name:  Introduction to Management Accounting
Textbook: Introduction to Management Accounting
Author(s):  Raun
Web Site:  http://www.csun.edu/~vcact00g/acct.html

Among other things you can download the complete textbook and a simulation.  Thanks for sharing Don.


Links to what are called "Smart Stops on the Web" in the May 1999 issue of the Journal of Accountancy, p. 19.  Some of these are repeats found in earlier editions of New Bookmarks.

A Guide to E-Commerce at http://e-comm.internet.com/

An Electronic Encyclopedia  at http://e-comm.internet.com/library/glossary.html
            A longer listing of this and similar glossaries can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm

U.S. Policy on E-Commerce at http://www.ecommerce.gov/

Some links from Stephen H. Glad (links to accounting, auditing, finance, and government sites) at http://www.sglad.com/

A Salary Comparison Guide at http://jobsmart.org/tools/salary/

National Employee Benefits Web at http://www.benefitslink.com/

The Argus Clearinghouse at http://www.clearinghouse.net/

Ratings of web sites in the following categories:  Arts & Humanities, Business & Employment, Communication, Computers & Information Technology, Education, Engineering, Environment, Government & Law, Health & Medicine, Places & Peoples, Recreation, Science & Mathematics, Social Sciences & Social Issues

Includes a five-year archive on Jakob Nielsen's bi-weekly column on Web usability (including summaries of common design flaws in personal and corporate web sites) at http://www.useit.com/

On the leading edge with (the billionaire former partner of Bill Gates) Paul Allen at http://www.paulallen.com/  (a man of many talents and interests who invests in so many things that it boggles the mind of a poor bookkeeping professor)

Can you believe the Fork in the Head metaphor?  I have to call this web site a little funky at http://www.forkinthehead.com/

InvestorWords glossary of over 5,000 terms and 15,000 links, including terms on derivative financial instruments at http://www.investorwords.com/
                  A longer listing of this and similar glossaries can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm

Vitual Relocation helpers from James Angelini, CPA.  Among other things you can find cost of living comparisons at http://www.virtualrelocation.com/


Evolutionary Psychology (contains links to selected papers on a wide variety of topics)
http://home1.gte.net/ericjw1/evpsych.html


The Wall Street Journal Classroom Edition
http://info.wsj.com/classroom/


History
Exploring 100 years of art and culture (The American Century)
http://whitney.artmuseum.net/

Origins of American Animation 1900-1921
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/oahtml/oahome.html


The Math Lady for Texas Instruments Educational Calculators
http://www.mathlady.com/


The New York Observer
http://www.observer.com/


Imagination Integration (Helpers for school teachers and children)
http://www.twoteach.com/Home.htm


The Mozart Project (for those of you who loved the wonderful concert a few weeks ago at Trinity University)
http://www.frontiernet.net/~sboerner/mozart/


From four women with chronic pain and illness
http://www.navigatingthebody.com/


Biodiversity
http://tectonic.nationalgeographic.com/2000/biodiversity/


PBS looks at America’s race wars today.
http://www.pbs.org/forgottenfires/


Photographic history (over 40,000 pictures)
http://www.dos.state.fl.us/fpc/


An interactive intergenerational storytelling project.
http://www.timeslips.org/


The Aging Education Speakers Bureau (AESB) is a collaborative group of senior providers who educate and provide resources to the community and professional groups about the issues of growing older.

With the graying of America, many employees are becoming caregivers to aging relatives or spouses as well as becoming seniors themselves. Gaining practical information about senior issues can assist your employees to make smarter life decisions and can make the decisions easier. It is inevitable that everyone will have to make some life planning decisions about themselves, a spouse, a parent or another family member.

AESB can provide speakers at no cost to your organization. The format suggested is a "Brown Bag" session lasting for 45 - 60 minutes. See the topics currently available.
http://www.nerds.net/aesb/


Education Alternatives tips for troubled teens
http://st6.yahoo.com/pursestrings2/aledguid.html


The Risk Analysis Center is being developed as a major information resource on the subject of risks affecting humans. Its principal aim is to contribute to better public understanding of, and ability to evaluate, risk in everyday life.  The heart of the site is a large and ever growing on-line database that contains abstracts of risk-related information.  The abstracts are of articles containing information about risk that appear in the press (leading newspapers are scanned daily) and in scientific, medical and technical journals. Risk material is also included from sources such as books, papers and technical reports from academic, research and other institutions.  http://www.risk-analysis-center.com/


The Pulse: A Consumer’s Guide to Public Opinion Data on the Web—EPI
http://www.epinet.org/pulse/pulse.html


From InformationWeek
SAP this week will unveil an update to its Business Information Warehouse system, offering stronger business content and improved analytical capabilities. Business Information Warehouse 1.2, available now, will include more multidimensional data models or "infocubes," additional business performance indicators, and a greater variety of preconfigured queries and "workbooks"—the Excel reports that are the product’s primary output. It will also offer expanded capabilities for monitoring data store and flow.

But analysts say the product isn’t ready to compete with other data warehouses. "There are still a lot of weak points," says Giga Information Group analyst Teresa Wingfield, pointing to the system’s R/3-centric architecture and cost—nearly $600 per user.
http://www.informationweek.com/732/sap.htm


Below is a description of the May issue of The Technology Source, a free refereed Web periodical at http://horizon.unc.edu/TS. Please forward this announcement to colleagues who are interested in using information technology tools more effectively in educational organizations. As always, we seek illuminating articles that will assist educators as they face the challenge of integrating information technology tools in teaching and in managing educational organizations. Please review our call for manuscripts at http://horizon.unc.edu/TS/call.asp 
Jim -- James L. Morrison morrison@unc.edu
Professor of Educational Leadership, CB 3500 Peabody Hall
Editor, On the Horizon UNC-Chapel Hill http://horizon.unc.edu/horizon  
Chapel Hill,NC 27599-3500
Editor, The Technology Source Phone: 919 962-2517 http://horizon.unc.edu/TS Fax: 919 962-1693


From the Scout Report
The inaugural issue of IN[]VISIBLE CULTURE: An Electronic Journal for Visual Studies is now available. This new journal, published by the Graduate Program in Visual and Cultural Studies at the University of Rochester (New York), aims "to provide a forum for critical approaches to the production and analysis of cultural objects." The premier issue carries the theme The Worlding of Visual Studies? and includes articles such as Cultural Studies and the Sociology of Culture, by Janet Wolff, Art History after the Death of the "Death of the Subject," by Keith Moxey, and Getting the Warhol We Deserve: Cultural Studies and Queer Culture, by Douglas Crimp. The journal also features art projects and hosts an electronic discussion group.
http://www.rochester.edu/in_visible_culture/


Hello. I came across your links page today and would really appreciate a link to our new site. Being relatively new, our site is not experiencing the number of hits we predicted. Getting a link on others pages can bring us more traffic.

We offer a service which many people need, but few are aware of. We are a Macintosh based Digital Video production company specializing in converting customers tapes into files for viewing over the web. We convert to RealVideo, QuickTime, MPEG-1, and NetShow.
Thanks for your time,
Guy Cochran, Managing Partner
Pixel Motion, 206.755.5555
http://pixelmotion.com


From ZD Tips
Lycos has announced a new practice to provide a more comprehensive index of the World Wide Web, by offering a homespun "open directory" compiled by volunteer experts, editors and assorted computer hobbyists. This new feature seems to be a way to cash in on the hype surrounding "Open-Sourced software." The directory now has 8,500 volunteer editors hosting Web pages. Lycos also owns HotBot.com. For more information, check out:
http://lycos.com/


A FrontPage tip from ZD Tips
Since HTML doesn’t support tabs and columns, tables are the best way to present columnar data. If your data is already in a Word table or an Excel spreadsheet, FrontPage will do a good job of maintaining the formatting when you paste the data in or insert it from a file.

But you can also work with data that’s saved in a delimited text file, such as the results from a FrontPage form. To do so, paste the data in, and then choose Convert Text To Table from the Table menu. In the dialog box that appears, specify what delimiting character was used to separate the data (probably a comma, tab, or paragraph mark) and click OK. FrontPage will format the data as an HTML table.

Interestingly enough, FrontPage "remembers" where the tabs appeared in tab-delimited data-even though HTML doesn’t recognize tabs. However, you should convert your text immediately. If you close and reopen the document, FrontPage will "forget" where the tabs were and consider them spaces instead.


For definitions of ERP, SAP, etc. along with links see go to the S section at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm

News about SAP from InformationWeek
SAP yesterday unveiled its long-awaited Internet strategy at its European user group conference in Nice, France. Called MySAP.com, the strategy consists of an Internet portal that will allow users to connect their back-end enterprise resource planning systems with new front-end applications for buying and selling goods and services over the Web. The MySAP.com portal is designed to be a meeting place and business center for the thousands of companies that use SAP software. The site will include such things as yellow pages and supplier catalogs for specific vertical markets. SAP officials say the portal will also help companies identify potential trading partners and facilitate negotiations for the purchase and sale of goods and services. The site will provide access to industry information, including business partner directories and job listings. SAP says users will be able to access the MySAP.com site beginning in the third quarter of this year. As part of the initiative, SAP is rolling out a personalized, Web-based user interface called MySAP-Employee Workplace. The new interface should allow employees to access service applications and content that exist on the portal, such as travel-reservation systems and online procurement engines, as well as general news items and information about retirement savings and benefits programs. SAP officials say the portal will also let the company's customers engage in more collaborative relationships with their supply-chain partners. SAP says it has created a number of new Internet applications, called SAP.Business Scenarios, to foster these relationships. These include SAP Business-to-Business Procurement, for the electronic purchasing of office supplies and product materials; SAP Business-to-Consumer Selling, which includes an Internet storefront and online catalogs; and SAP Business-to-Business Selling, which should enable business partners to share production data over the Internet and place orders based on real-time availability.
For PeopleSoft's Internet strategy, see "ERP Open For E- Business" http://www.informationweek.com/732/people.htm


IYDKYDG - if you don’t know, you don’t go.
http://www.iydkydg.com/



And that's the way it was on May 7, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

Hline.jpg (568 bytes)

Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

Hline.jpg (568 bytes)

April 30, 1999

It's my birthday today just in case you want to send a really big expensive present. 


Those of you interested in information technology (IT) in the Top 20 accounting research institutions may be interested in the email message reproduced at the bottom of this week's "New Bookmarks."  Since this message from "a friend" is a bit long, I reproduced it at the end of this Edition.  I would like to hear from other faculty in those institutions. 

What is sad is that accounting is about "information" and "information technology."   My bottom line conclusion is that the 'Top 20" business schools are way behind the IT curve in general and way behind the other divisions in their institutions (e.g., humanities, science, and medicine) in particular.  My opinion is that accounting faculty in the Top 20 business schools are even behind the IT snail's in other departments in their own business schools (e.g., snails in management, marketing, and finance.)  Look for example at the service now provided the the Journal of Finance that is mentioned below. 

What top accounting researcher in the Top 20 business schools is taking any leadership in emerging technologies for learning?

By the way, the best-known listing of the Top 20 business schools can be found at http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/beyond/gradrank/mba/gdmbat1.htm

Go to the bottom of this (my birthday issue) edition of New Bookmarks to see read about the thoughts of one top researcher from a leading business school.


Updates on XML

RDF and XML --- The Next Big Things on the WWW!
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm#RDF

Just about every recent technology magazine and journal carries at least one article about the looming XML and RDF.  My top recommendation, apart from my own overview mentioned above, is entitled "XML: The Last Silver Bullet" by Jack Vaughan in Application Development Trends, April 1999, 24-30.  He contends that "coming as it does on the heels of the Web's great success (HTML), XML is viewed by some as having a far broader impact."  This is a nice summary article of the history of XML (it only started in 1996) and XML's tremendous future.  Vaughn also discusses RDF.  The online version of this article is at
http://www.adtmag.com/pub/apr99/f04eaix0499.htm

Not much is out there yet in the way of software for XML and the standards have not yet been fully established to be embedded in web browser software.  However, some business firms are already experimenting with XML.  One piece of software that already has an XML backbone is the Dynabase from INSO (800-733-5799) at http://www.inso.com/Dynabase can be built on top of such relational database systems as Oracle, Sybase, Informix, SQL Server, and DB2.  (It should be pointed out, however, that XML will eventually be an object-oriented database system).  Dynabase uses a proprietary programming language that is very close to Visual Basic and will, therefore, integrate well with Microsoft's Office 2000 products.  It is a bit early for poor professors to start experimenting with Dynabase since it carries a price tag of $50,000.  But Dynabase is already on the move in the corporate worldA license for Dynabase would make a nice albeit expensive birthday gift for Bob Jensen.


XML Update from InternetWeek on "XML in Your Palm"
Bluestone Software next week will post extensible markup language (XML) applications for the 3Com Palm Computing platform—believed to be among the first publicly available XML apps for 3Com’s popular PDA.  The pair of applications—one for the Palm and one for an XML server—connects the Palm’s contact database to corporate information.  Both applications will be posted on Bluestone’s Web site on April 27. "In essence, this maps the Palm’s database for contacts with XML documents," said John Capobianco, Bluestone’s senior vice president of marketing.
http://www.internetwk.com/story/INW19990421S0004


The SEC's Ten Questions to Ask About Any Investment Opportunity.
http://www.sec.gov/consumer/10quest.htm


I guess the United States is part of "the world."  The IASC is gaining global support.
"KPMG UK has announced its support for IAS as the accounting standards for Europe -- and the world" March 29 announcement at http://www.iasc.org.uk .


PricewaterhouseCoopers opens its Florida facility to teach IT skills to employees.  This is a 23 acre campus where up to 750 recruits are sent for training courses.  However, about 40% of the training is done online over an intranet.  For a summary of this operation see Information Week, April 12, 1999, Page 150.  I could not find the online version of this article.  Nor could I find any mention of this "College for Consultants" at the PWC web site at http://www.pwcglobal.com/


Bob,
I have not yet updated my page on Double Entries so the information that you gave to AECM on how to subscribe is incorrect. A Web-based registration form for Double Entries is at http://www.accountingeducation.com/subscribe.cfm The form makes it very easy for any user to sign up for Double Entries (Mark 2).
Cheers,
RogerD


Congratulations to Gary Holstrum for getting the following bit into the Scout Report.  The Scout Report is selective about what it chooses to feature.

The Internet and Distance Learning in Accounting Education—IFAC
http://www.ifac.org/StandardsAndGuidance/Education/DistanceLearning.html

This new discussion paper from the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) Education Committee addresses issues of quality assurance in Internet and distance education with the hope that the publication will act as a "springboard" for further discussion among accounting educators. The paper concludes with clear guidelines for a "formidable" distance education program, and a lengthy appendix includes relevant Websites for further consideration (As quoted from the Scout Report for April 23, 1999).


I worry some about business schools that are jumping on the huge commitment to bring SAP to students.  SAP is one of the various alternatives (such as Baan and PeopleSoft) for Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP).  First, SAP is an enormous commitment of resources, faculty training, and student time.   Second, there is a legal liability risk that should be carefully cleared through any university's legal department since it is possible for users to find themselves named in lawsuits brought against developers of SAP.  Links to SAP and various other ERP alternatives can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#SAP

More importantly, I worry about the future of ERPs in general.   In this context I call your attention to an article by Tom Stein entitled "ERP's Fight for Life," in Information Week, April 12, 1999, 59-66.  The online version is at
http://www.informationweek.com/729/erp.htm

Various schools of business have invested heavily in SAP.   One example is California State University at Chico.  It would be interesting to hear from some faculty who are teaching SAP to give some advice to faculty who are contemplating recommending SAP to their administrators.  Please address such questions as the following:

SAP Training at http://wwwext03.sap.com/usa/trainsupp/

Major ERP vendors

SAP at  http://www.sap.com
Baan at http://www5.baan.com/cgi-bin/bvisapi.dll  
JD Edwards at http://www.jdedwards.com/
Microsoft SQL Server at http://www.microsoft.com/sql/default.htm  
Oracle at http://www.oracle.com/index_4.html  
PeopleSoft at http://www.peoplesoft.com/


FASB's self-study CD-ROM course on SFAS 133 (Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging)
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/fasb (I could not get the CD-ROM link to work.  Maybe you will have better luck.)


The Journal of Finance maintains a very helpful and extensive web site called the Finance Site List http://www.cob.ohio-state.edu/htbin/htimage/~fin/journal/jf.conf?48,215   .  Categories include the following:

Other Journals
Institutional Working Paper Sites
Personal Working Paper Sites
The Finance Profession
Research Centers
Link Collections
Asset Pricing & Investments
Derivatives
Corporate Finance and Governance
Financial Institutions
Research Software and Data
Educational Resources
Of Interest to Students
Misc

Also do not forget the wonderful Yahoo finance web site at
http://dir.yahoo.com/Business_and_Economy/Finance_and_Investment/


Thank you Aaron
A Yale University computer scientist is about to release a commercial software program that he says will alleviate "information overload" and change the way people think about computer data. Although the software may not yet live up to its creator's grand vision, it offers some innovative ways to manage large collections of documents.

Now Mr. Gelernter is taking on a new role, becoming a salesman as well as a researcher. His company, MirrorWorlds, hopes to peddle the software to universities, corporations, and, eventually, individual computer users.

See http://moof.cs.trinity.edu/~akonstam/lifestream.html


Do not forget to check out Aaron's Educational Tips and SnippitsMost of us are going to miss Aaron.
http://moof.cs.trinity.edu/~akonstam/snippits/


Hey Don --- all management professors should probably bookmark Cornell University's Workplace Issues Today
http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/LIBRARY/WIT/


Examples of online courses can be found at Temple University
http://oll.temple.edu/oll/davefeeney/summer99.htm

These courses use Cornell University's Blackboard shell for online communications, interactions, and course pages that can be generated without having to learn HTML.  During my visit to Temple, David Feeney told me they compared the top server shells and decided Blackboard stood above the crowd.  You can read about Blackboard and other shells at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245soft1.htm


Heavy duty web publishing systems are reviewed in "Untangling Your Web Site," NewMedia, April 1999, 42-50.  The online version is at http://newmedia.com/newmedia/99/05/labreport/Untangling_Your_Site.html


This week's featured accounting educator is Dennis Bline at Bryant College.  His "Communications for Accountants" course tackles the very serious problem of how to improve the communications skills of accounting majors (you know --- those nerds who focus in mostly on shoelaces.)  See http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/facdev/teaching/submissions/bline.htm

This document outlines a required sophomore level course that has been developed to enable students to understand the difference between communicating to show knowledge and communicating to address a problem. Students are given instruction in areas that emphasize business communication priorities such as audience focus, organization, structure, and conciseness. They are then given assignments that require them to communicate to different audiences. These assignments are designed to enable each student to practice the skills discussed in class. In addition, students are required to provide feedback to peers on both written and oral assignments. As a result, they are introduced to another skill that will be necessary in practice, peer review.


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week, I feature
Instructor:  Peter Kenyon
Institution:  Humboldt State University
Course Name: Introductory Financial, Managerial, and Survey
Textbook: various
Web Site:  http://www.humboldt.edu/~pbk1/courseware/index.html

Peter was one of my early "Daring Professors" that you can read about at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ideasmes.htm


More links to news and current events than you will ever want
http://www.mediainfo.com/


Directory of Online Corporate Annual Reports
http://www.reportgallery.com/content/glry_a.htm


WomenInvesting
http://www.morningstar.net/news/Ms/Women/990416women.msnhtml


The Motley Fool: How to Value Stocks (this is a misleading title to a very good web site)
http://www.fool.com/School/HowtoValueStocks.htm


Thank you Neil Hannon for the "Links to the Top Five Personal Finance Web Sites:
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/finance_personal.htm

Also see the CFO Magazine Online
http://www.cfonet.com/


Oh No!
United States Tax Court - take your case to a higher authority.
http://www.ustaxcourt.gov/


The Tax History Project
http://www.taxhistory.org/


New York Times Magazine
http://www.nytimes.com/library/magazine/millennium/m1/index.html


Effective Communication (a free online magazine)
http://www.hodu.com


LinuxPlanet
http://www.linuxplanet.com/


What do you expect when you've only got one bullet in your pocket and none in the chamber?   (Mayberry Memories)
BarneyFife.Com
http://www.barneyfife.com/


A Positive Light (Poetry)
http://www.execpc.com/~shepler/poetrybug.html


FamilySearch - from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
http://www.familysearch.org/


Dart throwing is not allowed! (But you are allowed to pin a tail on the donkey.)
American Presidents: Life Portraits
http://www.americanpresidents.org/


Dart throwing is allowed!
Reviewboard for consumer products
http://www.reviewboard.com/


Bug Network (not computer bugs, the crawling variety that birds love and we hate)
http://www.bugnetwork.com/


California Shipwrecks
http://shipwrecks.slc.ca.gov/


Take a walk on the moon
http://www.inconstantmoon.com/


California Plants and Habitats
http://elib.cs.berkeley.edu/photos/flora/


Dream Home 2000
http://www.dreamhome2000.com/


I will pass along a message from Matt Stroud about how language placement tests will be administered online at Trinity University using the Computerized Adaptive Placement Exam (CAPE) shell. (well maybe it's not really a server shell).  CAPE is restricted to selected online testing of language skills in Spanish, Russian, German, and French.  It is intended for online testing and grading.  The CAPE home page is at http://creativeworks.byu.edu/HRC/capevers.html .

Bob,
In the immortal words of Tevye, "I’ll tell you... I don’t know. But we have it!" What we are using is a package bought from Brigham Young University. They produced language placement tests (called CAPE tests) using Toolbook (your old friend). We then mount them on the network and anyone linked directly can take them (try them yourself: N:\Class\Tests\Mll\ then double click on the flag icon of the language you want to take). Here’s where the mystery comes in. The results are logged to a folder, oddly enough called "Results" in the same \Mll subdirectory. How the results get from the student computer to that subdirectory probably involves exactly the kind of thing you are asking about, a shell. Sorry to say, I don’t know what the programming/interface for the program looks like. You might want to contact Steve Curry. He set it up for us, but having seen the setup program, all it asks is "Where do you want to post the results?" My short answer to your question is no, TUCC did not install a shell for our program. The process to post student results came with the program.

Matt


You can read more about the E&Y-funded M.S. in Accounting programs at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm

A note from Ellen at E&Y concerning the E&Y-funded M.S. in Accounting degrees at Notre Dame and the University of Virginia

Bob,
I appreciate your summary of the comments and will climb more into depth. I have been involved in all of this and do have many more facts about the E&Y program than the KPMG program. It sounds like Tom Frecka cleared up some of the facts.

Our decision to include a limited amount of accounting majors in this program is designed to address the concern that the 150 hour rule is a barrier to entry for minorities and severely financially disadvantaged students. These students would be admitted to the program but exempt from the readiness program. In terms of the intensive immersion in undergraduate curriculum, I feel very confident that UVA and Notre Dame can do an excellent job. As you may know, USC (Southern Cal) has been doing an intensive immersion program for years for Coopers hires and they report quite good results.

Students are hired to the firm pending acceptance into one of these academic programs. The universities manage the admissions process and guidelines. The firm is aware of the quality of student appropriate for these institutions - it is this excellent candidate we aspire to hire and put up for acceptance by the schools.

Ernst & Young does not want to compete with accounting programs, we hope to increase the source of assurance professionals. The numbers of majors are decreasing in many institutions and our business is growing with great gusto. We are eager to hire smart graduates all over the country. By trying to entice business majors to the profession, we are looking to leverage the investments so many schools have made in their entry level classes- to the benefit of these same students. If we can take that positive experience and add to it, I have confidence that we will have a group of truly outstanding professionals.

Thanks again for your note,
Ellen J. Glazerman Ellen.Glazerman@EY.COM


Search Information from ZD Tips
AltaVista has announced they will begin to sell listings on its results pages, allowing users who submit a query to see two "paid placements" along with the other computer-generated results. This is much like a standard policy at Yahoo! as well as GoTo.com. Alta Vista plans to sell paid placements by auctioning off certain keywords and offering the listing to the highest bidder. Bidding will begin at 25 cents per click through. For more info, check out:
http://www.altavista.com


Update on Speech Recognition from InformationWeek
Speech-recognition vendors are trying to make the technology more attractive to IT managers. Nuance Communications this week will introduce software to make it easier and cheaper to build speech-enabled enterprise applications, and Dragon Systems Inc. will roll out an enterprise edition of its desktop software. Nuance is releasing Foundation SpeechObjects, blocks of open-software code that developers can use to build speech applications quickly. The objects include the typical items a computer may need to recognize in a speech application, such as dates, times, telephone numbers, yes/no, and digit strings. Nuance says using SpeechObjects can shave 75% off development time. The first version of SpeechObjects will be packaged as JavaBeans; the product will be available later this year as ActiveX Controls. SpeechObjects is available for download for members of a new Nuance developer network. Membership in the network, which includes online discussions and other resources, is priced at $495 a year, compared with the $5,000 Nuance was charging for its independent software developer toolkit. Dragon Systems NaturallySpeaking Enterprise Edition, which is installed on servers, lets mobile workers use speech recognition at any PC attached to a company's network. In the past, users had to set up a profile and train the software at every PC they used.

See http://www.informationweek.com


North Carolina Moonshine (... Hic ... the important side of history)
http://metalab.unc.edu/moonshine/


Special Insert: 
The following message comes from one of the leading accounting researchers at one of the leading accounting research institutions in the United States.  Since his/her thoughts are still tentative on such sensitive matters, I am not disclosing the source of this message. 
You should have seen my reply to this message, but that would probably bruise the egos of some of my best friends too much to make public.

Bob,
I’m pondering something that I’d like to share with you—given your unique and exemplary position as the champion of all champions of technology in accounting education. Don’t mean to burden you with lots of reading here. But would like your thoughts on the following....

What I find remarkable about the area of technology as it relates to accounting education is the extent of market segmentation—i.e., the dramatic contrast between the top 20 research universities versus all other programs. The accounting departments at the top 20 research universities are entirely indifferent to the technological revolution. Yet all other accounting programs in the country are convinced that their futures depend on the speed with which they adopt technology to their pedagogies and programs.

To date, the neglect by the top 20 research universities does not appear to have hurt them. Grants and outside funds to these departments are strong. Their recruiting (of students and faculty) is solid and their rankings haven’t suffered.

My most recent perception (as of this morning!) is that the 20 top research schools may be exceptionally smart in letting the other schools sort out the technology-in-accounting market a bit before the research schools begin to integrate technology in their programs. The "non-research" schools pay the costs of being at the "bleeding edge" of technology while the research schools focus on increasing their visibility in the research area.

Have you observed these trends? What are your perceptions?

Best wishes,
(Name Deleted)

Closing comments from Bob Jensen:
Even though I will not reproduce my reply to the above message, I will repeat what I said at the top of this April 30 Edition to New Bookmarks.

My bottom line conclusion is that the 'Top 20" business schools are way behind the IT curve in general and way behind the other divisions in their institutions (e.g., humanities, science, and medicine) in particular.  My opinion is that accounting faculty in the Top 20 business schools are even behind the IT snail's in other departments in their own business schools (e.g., snails in management, marketing, and finance.)  Look for example at the service now provided the the Journal of Finance that is mentioned above. 

What top accounting researcher in the Top 20 business schools is taking any leadership in emerging technologies for learning?

By the way, the best-known listing of the Top 20 business schools can be found at http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/beyond/gradrank/mba/gdmbat1.htm



And that's the way it was on April 30, 1999.  The address for those big expensive birthday presents is given below.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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April 23, 1999

I had nothing to do with the search engine reported below,  but I am honored that "k ibrahim" took the time and trouble to help you search my "full set" of bookmarks.  I might warn readers, however, that many bookmarks are contained in my New Bookmarks file that have not yet been posted to the "full-set."    Bringing the "full set" up to date is on my to-do list as soon as final examinations are ended this semester.

I would encourage Mr. Ibrahim to create a search engine for my New Bookmarks file as well.  The New Bookmarks file is the one with commentaries.  However, that file lacks an index.

The following was a message posted on the CPA listserv:

******************

To:  CPAS-L@VAX.LOYOLA.EDU
From:  k ibrahim

http://jensenbookmarks.cjb.net/

new search engine box has been installed in Dr. Jensen bookmarks , u can now search either the site or the web ,,.urs,

k.ibrahim
http://accounting.cjb.net


Now that my ACCT 5341 International Accounting Theories course is drawing to a close, I will make the "secret" web site to my SFAS 133 (Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments and Hedging Activities) tutorial files public.   The secret web site is at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/13300tut.htm

You may also want to go to the public web site information at the following URLs:
http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm
http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/index.htm


I have revised my Working Paper 260 on Networking of Databases to include overviews of "RDF and XML - The Next Big Things on the WWW."  See
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm#RDF

Also do not forget the great links shown below:

(XML for the Absolute Beginner) www.javaworld.com/javaworld/jw-04-1999/jw-04-xml.html

(A good RDF web site) http://web1.w3.org/TR/REC-rdf-syntax/

(Vendors pledge support) http://www.informationweek.com/725/xml.htm


From InformationWeek Daily
XML Vendors Merge, Will Offer Extended Products And Services__ DataChannel Corp., maker of Extensible Markup Language applications, yesterday gained a services business by merging with Isogen. The combined companies will offer a range of products and services for deploying XML applications. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The merger will bolster DataChannel’s XML Framework, a package of products and services that includes DataChannel’s XML applications and systems integrators. Isogen brings experience in designing, integrating, and implementing XML applications for clients such as Chase Manhattan Bank, Lockheed Martin, Lucent Technologies, and Nortel Networks. The combined companies will employ about 40 systems integrators. "This is the largest concentration in the world of people who are intimately familiar with building XML applications," says George Kondrach, general manager at Isogen.

DataChannel and Isogen will work to flesh out DataChannel’s XML Framework 4.0, due for release next quarter. They will enhance the framework’s XMLBluePrint, XML Design and Architecture, and training components. "We’ll be putting together a packaging of the XML Framework so other integrators, consultants, and developers can license technologies, for example," Kondrach says. "We think XML has its greatest value in becoming ubiquitous."

***For more on XML, see "XML Applications Stand Up To EDI"
http://www.techweb.com/se/directlink.cgi?INW19990419S0014


Bravo for a good job to Australian Professor Andrew Priest for AcctInfoPlus. That site is developed and maintained for the Academic and Professional Accounting community by Andrew Priest of Edith Cowan University, Perth, Western Australia. The purpose is to provide a comprehensive listing of all upcoming accounting conferences and links to their respective pages
or other contact information.
http://www-business.ecu.edu.au/acctinfoplus/

I was saddened to read the following information at the above web site:

It has been decided with regret, to remove the accounting resource links section of this (AcctInfoPlus) site. The maintenance burden associated with this section has become to high. I have decided to concentrate my efforts in maintaining the Conference Calendar and continuing my work with Double Entries.

Accountants around the world, however, can still follow world accounting news by subscribing to Double Entries.  Check out the following web sites:

http://caarnet.ntu.edu.sg/cn/de/index.htm

http://www.csu.edu.au/anet/


Thank you Gary Holstrum
The International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) Education Committee has posted a working paper on its web site titled "The Internet and Distance Learning in Accounting Education: A Hyper-Linked Exploration of the Topic." The working paper discusses issues of quality assurance in Internet and Distance Education in Accounting and contains numerous hyperlinks to other relevant web sites. The working paper may be accessed by first going through the IFAC Home Page, www.ifac.org, then through the "Education Committee" link to the Education Committee discussion papers. (See www.ifac.org/Committees/Education/index.html ).

You can also go directly to http://www.ifac.org/StandardsAndGuidance/Education/DistanceLearning.html


Following the issuance of IAS 39 (good job Paul Pacter) and the meeting IOSCO's deadline for setting the core international accounting standards, foreign companies are anxiously waiting to see whether the IASC will become a major player in accounting standard setting for potential entrants into U.S. capital markets.  Read about the hoopla and controversies at
http://www.iasc.org.uk/

You can also read much more about the IASC's past and future at
http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/pacter.htm

And you can read about what the FASB is saying about the IASC at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/fasb/


Educators might be able to help the Financial Executives Institute (FEI).  FEI allows many universities to nominate an accounting or finance professor to join at reduced (academic) membership rates.  Does your college or university have a faculty member in the FEI?  Does your college's top financial officer have a regular (non-academic) membership?  If your college is not already represented in the FEI by at least one regular and one academic member, I suspect the local or regional chapter of the FEI would like to know who to contact for membership.  You can examine the FEI web site or contact Phil Livingston for more information.  FEI welcomes its newest academic members --- Mary Barth from Stanford and Wayne Landsman from the University of North Carolina.

I finally had a chance to see and touch a Super Bowl ring.  Last Thursday, Phil Livingston met with past presidents of the South Texas FEI Chapter.  I had the privilege of being President of the ST Chapter in 1996.  The following memo Phil sent to all FEI members around the world is interesting.  Phil is the new President over all FEI chapters.  Phil is really trying to shape the future of FEI and is a great spokesperson for corporations.  I don't agree with him on all issues such as accounting for employee compensation, but who wants to argue with a former offensive tackle for the Oakland Raiders who stays is such good shape that he looks like he could still be a draft pick.  Seriously, however, Phil would like to hear from accounting educators with ideas about how to position the FEI for the future and how to make FEI better known among college students.  This is a challenge because college graduates are a long way from being eligible to join the FEI (most members are CFOs or Controllers of large organizations). 

I am passing along a few excerpts taken from Phil's longer message.

*****************

To: FEI Members
From: Phil Livingston, FEI President

Some great things are happening at FEI. Hope you find something useful for your daily work in the following information.

Letter to The New York Times editors - On March 28th, The New York Times ran another column bashing the quality of corporate reporting and accounting. I responded on April 1 and they have informed us that the letter to the editor will run on Sunday, April 18th, unless space prohibits. I hope you find the response representative of your views too.

The popular press finds it too easy and convenient to run articles bashing stock option accounting and management compensation. They fail to fully explore the complexity of the subject, the incredible results of our marketplace-driven system and the strength of the governance process in our capital markets. Here is a link to the text of both the original article and my response: http://www.fei.org/letters/timeslet.htm

Professor David LaRue and M&A presentation - In response to my last FEI Express, Dr. LaRue, McIntire School of Commerce at the University of Virginia, sent in the most unbelievable Powerpoint presentation on structuring and tax implications of cash-based acquisitions. The graphics and substance of the analysis are tremendous. You can access it in our download library by clicking here. http://www.fei.org/download/dl_index.htm. We gave Dr. LaRue a Palm Pilot for this great contribution to the betterment of our profession. He indicates that more will follow.

Phil Livingston
President and CEO
mailto:plivingston@fei.org


Kaplan's online, asynchronous learning law school
http://www1.kaplan.com/view/article/0,1898,2983,00.html


Thank you Neil Hannon and Andrew Priest
That really big directory for web site developers
http://reallybig.com/default.shtml


News From Macromedia
See how Tim Barber, Creative Director at CircumStance Designs, depends on Macromedia Dreamweaver 2 as "hub central for project development."   See his design techniques in Macromedia's new Dreamweaver Designer Spotlight at:
http://www.macromedia.com/software/dreamweaver/designerspotlight

The new Fireworks Designer Spotlight launches with not one but four noted Fireworks designers. Check out how Sandee Cohen uses Fireworks 2 with Wacom tablets to create thousands of different effects in the April spotlight. Then visit the "Techniques" section to see more from Donna Casey, Sandee Cohen, Lisa Lopuck, and Lynda Weinman at:
http://www.macromedia.com/software/fireworks/designerspotlight

And finally, the experts at Ziff Davis Journals show us how to animate FreeHand graphics in Fireworks at:
http://www.zdjournals.com/freehand/article8/article8.htm

Hands on training and conferences
http://www.macromedia.com/macromedia/events/


News from Microsoft:
Major Upgrade to Windows Media Technologies
http://www.microsoft.com/misc/features.htm

TechNet DVD Beta
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/subscription/dvd.htm

Egyptian Art Exhibit Gets Boost from Site Server Commerce
http://www.microsoft.com/france/rmn/us/

Given the booming popularity of digital cameras and scanners, making digital content easier to manage will be key to driving broader adoption of PCs among consumers.
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9904081/1014319/

Learn How to Process Credit Cards for Online Payment
http://msdn.microsoft.com/workshop/server/commerce/creditcard.asp


From InformationWeek Newsletter:
Chambers pointed to the company he heads, the leading enterprise data networking vendor and the largest online revenue producer, as an example of how increased emphasis on IT and the use of the Internet can result in staggering revenue growth and a powerful competitive position.

"In 1991, we made a decision to use IS and networked applications as a key competitive advantage," he said. "Without this capability, we’d have no chance of taking on large players," such as Nortel, Alcatel and Siemens. More tangible results: in the past two fiscal years, the company’s use of "seven or eight" major Web applications has resulted in a 20 percent increase in productivity and $500 million in savings.

http://www.internetwk.com/story/INW19990415S0003


A fresh wave of wireless wares and services is emerging that may help service providers deliver broadband directly to customers by skipping the "last mile."
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9904163/1014409


Lists and quotes of famous people throughout history commenting on core values
http://www.fizzix.com/army/corevalues


Java Demos for Probability and Statistics
http://www.math.csusb.edu/faculty/stanton/m262/probstat.html


Codes of Ethics Online Project
http://csep.iit.edu/codes/


What is the ISO 9000?  Look it up at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm

ISO 9000 Translated into Plain English
http://www.connect.ab.ca/~praxiom/


IT Braces For Next Virus Onslaught
http://www.internetwk.com/story/INW19990416S0001


eCost claims to have thousands of shopping products at or below cost (this may be true, but Jensen always recommends that you compare prices and service)
http://www.ecost.com


From the Scout Report
Knowledge Broker
http://www.knowledgebroker.org/knowledgebroker/
The United Nations Development Program (UNDP) has recently launched Knowledge Broker, a Web portal that provides development experts, government agencies, and private organizations with centralized "access to knowledge, practical solutions, and best practices" for using information technologies to promote sustainable human development. Knowledge Broker interconnects three Websites: INFO21, the Sustainable Development Networking Programme (SDNP), and the HORIZON Communications Solutions Site. INFO21 functions as UNDP’s online resource center for information on the relationship between sustainable human development and communications technologies. The SDNP, also a UNDP site, supports connectivity and information-sharing in developing countries. And the HORIZON site, a collaborative project produced by several development research centers, offers "readily accessible peer-reviewed answers to problems in environment, health, population, and development."


Einstein’s Dreams
http://www.einsteinsdreams.com/

Aboriginal stories of the dreaming
http://www.dreamtime.net.au/


Center for Effective Parenting
http://www.parenting-ed.org/parents.htm

Becoming the Parent You Want to Be
http://www.becomingtheparent.com/all/hp.html

Find the "truth in youth"
http://www.bamboozled.org/


Caring Kids is an award-winning series of contemporary realistic fiction and fantasy for children ages 8-12 by Irma K. Ghosn. The stories are set mainly in the Middle-Eastern context and feature themes of environment, ecology, human rights, tolerance, peace and social responsibility. The stories aim at raising children's awareness about social issues, instilling in them the idea that individuals can make a difference and nurturing emotional intelligence. The characters are mostly average children (or animals in situations that children can easily identify with), who experience problems and conflict, both universal and regional. Some of the stories in the series are fantasy where the characters and events will reflect real life situations in symbolic form.
http://www.caringkids.com/index.html


NewsMaps.com is a very innovative web site for viewing current international news in the media and current news on the Internet (including highlights from News Groups).   What is especially unique is the geography/mapping metaphor.  Documents are grouped topographically by subject.  This is a sophisticated web site.
http://www.newsmaps.com/


Open Studio: The Arts Online
http://www.openstudio.org/


Prairiesource.com (prairie grasses, wildflowers, and other related topics)
http://www.prairiesource.com/


Erikson Biographical Institute, Inc.
http://www.geocities.com/~ebiprov/


Ancient Egypt Dictionary
http://www.pharaonicarts.com/dictionary.htm


At the top of the world (the initial moving photograph of the top of Mt. Everest is worth the price of a mouse click)
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/everest/


You can also read about an Everest trek in Quokka Sports
http://www.quokka.com/


Fratelli Alinari's web site in Italian or English (this is a classy web site with collections of various items in European history, art, and photography)
http://www.alinari.com/


Create your own online animations at the 16 Color Cinema
http://www.16color.com/


For cartoon and comics enthusiasts
http://www.artoon.com/


Abstracts of the articles in the latest issue of On the Horizon
http://horizon.unc.edu/horizon/online/login.asp

The Technology Revolution: The George Washington University Forecast of Emerging Technologies
Michael Kull and William E. Halal

According to Kull and Halal, revolutionary innovation-driven primarily by advances in information technology (IT)-is currently underway in all scientific and technological fields. Recognizing that fact is one thing; being prepared for the impact that IT developments will have on education is quite another. The authors explain how the George Washington University Forecast of Emerging Technologies, a unique program that issued its first report in 1990, uses the expertise of technology specialists to identify emerging technologies that will impact GWU over the next three decades. For any educational administrator feeling overwhelmed by the Technology Revolution, this article provides essential information on how to cope with changes that will do nothing less, Kull and Halal contend, than "transform modern civilization."

The Role of Technology in Education Today and Tomorrow: An Interview with Kenneth Green, Part II
James L. Morrison

Kenneth Casey Green and James L. Morrison continue their conversation about the use of information technology tools in education (for the first installment of this interview, see the September/October 1998 OTH). Green readily admits that "infusing technology into the educational experience-in K-12 and in higher education-is not like a surgical or pharmaceutical intervention. To date there is no . . . definitive technology that consistently and reliably improves academic achievement and learning outcomes." He convincingly argues, however, that it would be "foolish" to reduce investments in IT-based learning, which provides individualized instruction, asynchronous learning, enhanced content, and information-rich resources. Green is the founder/director of the Campus Computing Project, the largest continuing study of the role of information technology in American higher education.

Will Universities Be Relics? What Happens When an Irresistible Force Meets an Immovable Object?
John W. Hibbs

Peter Drucker predicts that, in 30 years, the traditional university will be nothing more than a relic. Should we listen or laugh? Hibbs examines Drucker's prophesy in the light of other unbelievable events, including the rapid transformation of the Soviet Union "from an invincible Evil Empire into just another meek door-knocker at International Monetary Fund headquarters." Given the mobility and cost concerns of today's students, as well as the growing tendency of employers to evaluate job-seekers' competencies rather than their institutional affiliations, Hibbs agrees that the brick-and-mortar university is doomed to extinction.

The Data Warehouse Revolution on the Web
John H. Milam, Jr.

Some call it the "holy grail" for educational planners, and they are not talking about a loyal administrative assistant. Instead, the new technological object of reverence is the data warehouse: an online repository of useful management information that, with the advent of data streaming on the Web, has become both accessible and affordable. Milam evaluates the products that enable data streaming; he also applauds innovative data warehouse projects at the University of Minnesota and George Mason University.

Implications of the Attack on Tenure
Laurence R. Marcus

Marcus examines every side of the debate about tenure in higher education, citing the reasons supporters give for maintaining-and opponents give for abolishing-this once-sacred practice that recently has grown so controversial. He suggests that, in order to find a resolution to this debate, educational administrators may begin to emulate elected public officials who regulate the terms and conditions of their staff's employment. "When Philadelphia Mayor Ed Rendell negotiated a city workers' contract that previously had restricted the administration's ability to monitor staff performance and improve productivity," Marcus writes, "he was hailed as 'the mayor who knew how to reinvent the American city."' Will university administrators follow suit, renegotiate faculty contracts, and use as leverage the big stick of abolishing tenure? Marcus weighs the odds.



And that's the way it was on April 23, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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April 18, 1999

Innovation in Accounting Education Award 1999 Submissions to the American Accounting Association
(I will review some of these documents in future editions of New Bookmarks)
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/facdev/teaching/awardsub.htm


AICPA Professor/Practitioner Case Development Program
Please be informed that the winning case materials (student notes only) are now available on the Institute Web site at http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/caseidx.htm.
(The 1998 winners are linked at http://www.aicpa.org/members/div/career/edu/caselist.htm#98 )

Copies of the cases are also being distributed to administrators of accounting programs and AICPA on-campus champions. Case materials were provided on a floppy disk in Word format together with a hard copy of the teaching notes. The multimedia case addressing ElderCare Services was provided in CD format. Academic authors will also be receiving the same compendium package being distributed to administrators and champions.

A specially bound volume containing all of the published notes will be sent to both academic and practitioner authors.

Since this is the first time that we are making these case materials available online, we encountered some problems in the process. We apologize for the delay in making these materials available sooner and for any inconvenience this may have caused.

Leticia Romeo
Coordinator, Academic and Career Development, AICPA
Tel. No. (212) 596-6221
lromeo@AICPA.ORG


I have been plowing my way through The XML Handbook by Charles Goldfarb and Paul Prescod and am trying to learn as much as possible about XML and RDF.  A message from a current graduate student (Dan Price) is repeated below:

Hi Dr. J,
I asked my wife about XML and RDF, and she gave me some good information about how they work in relation to HTML.
XML is a metalanguage based on the same foundation as HTML. RDF works within XML as a foundation for processing metadata. In a way, the two will work together like OO databases do. USAA’s web page uses some XML.

Two good sites on the topic are:

(XML for the Absolute Beginner) www.javaworld.com/javaworld/jw-04-1999/jw-04-xml.html

(A good RDF web site) http://web1.w3.org/TR/REC-rdf-syntax/

Dan Price

To Dan's message I might add the following online article entitled "XML Gains Ground:  Vendors pledge support as XML stands poised to become a universal format for data exchange" at
http://www.informationweek.com/725/xml.htm


For those of you following server shell alternatives for interactive education such as having students take examinations online and chat rooms, the IT pros that I have been speaking with lately rave about Blackboard.  There are many reports of bugs, complexities, and frustrations with TopClass (cynically known as BottomClass) and LearningSpace.  WebCT is probably still the best buy for a full-featured shell, but Blackboard seems to be users' choice these days at (about) $5,000 per server.   Blackboard had its origins in Cornell University.  In my visit at the Fox School of Business and Management at Temple University last week, I discovered that Temple has adopted Blackboard.

There is now an option to create a free Blackboard course online at
http://www.Blackboard.com

You can read more about server shells at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245soft1.htm

A heavy user of Blackbird at Temple University is David R. Feeney, distance Education Project Director.  His email address is dfeeney@astro.temple.edu .


This is a plug for my very good friend Bob Anthony (now retired from the Harvard Business School but still working away).

Software publisher Ivy Software has released Bob Anthony’s Essentials of Accounting in the Multimedia format. This CD ROM has numerous animations and voiceovers to assist the student in learning the essentials of accounting. There are eleven sections in the CD. Topics range from the basic elements of the balance sheet to financial statement analysis. Comparably priced to the print version, the CD offers a high degree of interactivity.

The Anthony CD ROM is priced at $50.00 plus shipping and handling compared to a retail price for the printed version of approximately (dependent on supplier) $36.00 plus shipping and handling. To write, fax or e-mail Ivy Software use the following address - 2246 Ivy Road, Ste. 14, Charlottesville, VA 22903; fax -804-293-9536; email - ivysoft@cstone.net. Or to call Ivy Software, dial 800-342-5489 or 804-293-7105.

http://www.cstone.net/~ivysoft/


Tax Helpers from the University of Illinois at Chicago
http://www.uic.edu/depts/lib/collections/govdocs/tax/index.html

Tips from Microsoft on how to avoid tax audits
http://moneycentral.msn.com/articles/tax/prepare/1384.asp


The featured accounting education innovator this week is a tax professor named Kevin Barrett at Appalachia State University.  Kevin's innovation is titled "Problem-Based Learning in a Multi-media Setting." It is described as follows

The student's responsibility is to search authoritative sources for information leading to the resolution of the issues in the case at hand. That search is conducted using U.S. Master Tax Guide CD-ROM and CCH online tax services. Once the student locates an appropriate source, that documentation is saved electronically with password protection to a specified file on the university LAN. The typical class takes place in a state-of-the-art classroom and centers on tax issues in the case under consideration. Each student has the opportunity to show expertise in the topic under consideration based on the research he/she has done prior to class. Upon providing the class with pertinent information about a tax issue, the electronically available information is copied from the student's computer file and added to the class' master narrative solution of the case. As the class builds the narrative solution using a Microsoft Word file, it also builds a numerical tax formula solution using a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. The group effort reflected in both the narrative and numerical solutions are available on the network for any student who needs to review, catch up, or prepare for the next case. Once the narrative and numerical solutions are done, groups of students work together to input the case into ProSystems, a tax return preparation software.

See http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/facdev/teaching/submissions/barrett.htm


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week's featured ACE professor is Dan Gode at New York University. 
Instructor: Dan Gode
Institution: Stern School of Business, New York University
Course Name: Financial Accounting (elementary level)
Textbook: Financial Accounting Tutor
Author(s): Dan Gode and Rachana Gode
Note the software tab at http://dgode.stern.nyu.edu/


Hoover’s UK (Database of information about companies in the UK, like the US version of EDGAR)
http://www.hoovers.co.uk/


Rick Cooper asked about audio in PowerPoint a few weeks ago. There is a good article entitled "Teaching PowerPoint to Talk" in the April, 1999 issue of Syllabus, 45-48. I don't think the April issue has yet been made available online, but it will soon be posted at http://www.syllabus.com/syllmag.html


Billy Burke reports that this is a great site for CEOs
http://www.ceoexpress.com/


On April 5, 1999 on Page 17, Newsweek Magazine discussed a new entrant to the online book market called netLibrary.  Unlike previous electronic books from publishing houses, netLibrary is a rental library for online education and professional book market.  Another difference is that the books themselves can be used on a PC using special downloading software called Knowledge Station that runs in Microsoft Windows. See http://www.netlibrary.com /

netLibrary is your 24 hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week connection to thousands of scholarly, reference, and professional eBooks. If you’re new to netLibrary, the following links will provide a quick overview of the capabilities of our site:

Searching books
Browsing books
Purchasing books
Reading free books
Checking out books
Downloading books to your computer
Establishing a netLibrary account
Modifying preferences
Creating bookshelves
.

netLibrary has a free reading room online at http://www.netlibrary.com/free.asp


One of the most controversial technologies for publishing are the electronic books that allow you to download entire copyrighted books into special hardware devices called "E-books."  Unlike netLibrary described above, these electronic books cannot be downloaded into desktop or laptop computers.  Nevertheless, electronic books have some advantages of computers such as text selection devices, highlighters, stylus pens for taking notes on margins of pages, hypertext linking, insertion of bookmarks, and keyword search capabilities.  Purportedly, E-books are easier to navigate than books downloaded into personal computers.  They do not allow computer utilities such as cut, copy, paste, and screen duplication.  Most do not yet connect to the Internet, although that type of connection is expected in the next round of upgrades to such devices.  The devices themselves are light, and some offer two screens to resemble adjoining pages of a hard copy book. 

The major publishing companies such as Random House and McGraw-Hill are coding selected manuscripts into electronic books.  Major advantages to publishers include avoiding the cost of printing in multiple colors on hard copy paper and destruction of the used book market.  Books can be updated more frequently, and holders of existing books can download new editions for reduced fees.  Dealers are easily bypassed with direct downloads over telephone lines.

Advantages to readers include lower prices, more frequent upgrades, and the ability to store five books or more into one easy to carry electronic book.  Drawbacks mainly center around screen quality and preferences for readers to view hard copy pages.

For a review see "Electronic Textbooks: From Paper to Pixels," Syllabus, February 1999, pp. 16-19.  The online version can be found at http://www.syllabus.com/feb99_magfea.html .  In that article Steve Epstein reports the following"

Major university projects, such as The Humanities Text Initiative at the University of Michigan (http://www.hti.umich.edu/) and Project Bartleby at Columbia ( http://www.columbia.edu/acis/bartleby/ ) have already begun to create and disseminate electronic versions of books.

One of the E-book devices is called Rocket eBook at http://www.rocketbook.com/ from NuvoMedia.  The following facts are given at the Rocket eBook web site:

About the size of a paperback, the Rocket eBook™ holds some 4,000 pages of words and images. That's about 10 novels. Weighing just 22 ounces, the Rocket eBook nestles easily in the curve of your palm. And it goes wherever you go - so you can take off in any direction and never be far from what you want or need to read.

Another E-book device is called the Softbook Electronic Tablet from Softbook Press at http://www.softbook.com/index.html .   Don Steinberg gives it raves at http://www.zdnet.com/products/stories/reviews/0,4161,368946,00.html .  He claims that this device has the best screen resolution.


IPO Express (investing)
http://www.edgar-online.com/ipoexpress/


The innovative way that general education core courses are taught without lectures at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute:
http://www.zdnet.com/pcmag/insites/miller_print/mm981009.htm
http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1998/05/05/fp51s1-csm.htm
http://www.rpi.edu/dept/science/www/Interactive_learning/classrooms.html
http://kmi.open.ac.uk/bp/oz/tsld011.htm (PowerPoint Slides)

You may want to read about the interesting way an Information Technology program is built around designated IT professors in virtually every academic department at Rensselaer:
http://www.rpi.edu/IT/


News from or about Microsoft

How WebTV Changing the Face of Education? (four case studies)
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/04-05webtv.htm

What’s new in Microsoft Excel 2000?
http://mspress.microsoft.com/news/features/

Free, Permanent E-mail Account on Hotmail
http://ad.hotmail.com/cgi-bin/hotdirector/bnnr/us/msn/promo

Tips on digital management (digital cameras, scanners)
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9904081/1014319/

Thank you Barry Rice and the Baltimore Sun
When they tracked the suspect down, investigators exploited a feature (or flaw) in Microsoft Word that exposes everyone who uses the program to potentially embarrassing invasions of privacy --- Microsoft has posted a Web page with links to programs that will purge the [culprit] from your system and show you how to modify Word’s settings to eliminate unnecessary information. You’ll find it at http://officeupdate.microsoft.com/Articles/privacy.htm."


The Umbrella Project (helpers for starting up a small business)
http://www.umbrellaproject.com/

Microsoft's helpers for small businesses
http://mspress.microsoft.com/business


American FactFinder
http://factfinder.census.gov/


The New York Times College Program for Professors and Students
http://www.nytcollege.com


Center for Evolutionary Psychology
http://www.psych.ucsb.edu/research/cep
/


Euro Papers
http://europa.eu.int/euro/html/rubrique-defaut5.html?rubrique=133&lang=5


Small Business Helpers
http://www.deionassociates.com/hplist/toc.htm


Armenian History
http://www.electpress.com/books/armenia.htm


Universal History Translation Project (languages)
http://www.radix.net/~fornax/hist/


The Frustrated Writers Society (United Kingdom)
http://www.writings.freeserve.co.uk


Knopf Poetry Center
http://www.randomhouse.com/knopf/poetry/


Encyclopedia of Cajun Culture
http://www.cajunculture.com


The FAQ Center
http://www.hewittpearce.com


The Ticked-Off Tourist
http://www.ticked.com/


Shop Online
http://www.lycos.com/shopnet/

New Automobile Information
http://www.lycos.com/autos/autosite.html


I received this message on a listserv. Another person responded that it was limited to $20 per month.  Actually there are a bunch of rules that are listed at the AllAdvantage web site.   Bob Jensen is very skeptical of such deals.

This person (Mr. Wilson) claims he recently joined a new Internet service that pays him money! AllAdvantage company said that they pay you while you surf the Web ($.50 an hour). It’s free to join.

http://alladvantage.com/go.asp?refid=AVV-183


A ZD Tip on Searching
While most search engines use simple "keyword" searches or intricate "boolean logic" in order to find the information you’re looking for, www.askjeeves.com takes a more relaxed approach. At AskJeeves, you simply type in the question you’re lookng for.

For example, an inquiry at www.altavista.com on the word "airplane" will result in thousands of referring documents, many of which may not apply to the original question you had in mind. Whereas, at AskJeeves, you can type in "how fast is a jet airplane?" and receive a prompt and direct reply to your question.

Give it a try at http://www.askjeeves.com


A ZD Tip on using Frontpage (changing frame contents in one click)
When you create a Web site that includes frames, you can easily use a hyperlink in one frame to change the contents of a second frame. But you may often want to change two frames with one click. To do so, add the following parameter to the HTML that defines the link:

onClick="parent.frame2.location.href="target2.htm"

The complete HTML for the link would then look something like this:

<a href="target1.htm" target="frame1"

onClick="parent.frame2.location.href="target2.htm">Click Here</a>

Of course, you’ll need to substitute the names of your actual frames and actual target documents.


Asymetrix is still trying to hang in there.
See http://www.asymetrix.com/support/techdocs.html

ToolBook documents
This section is dedicated to technical papers written by Asymetrix about development
techniques using our authoring software. Several of these documents represent handouts
delivered at the OnLine Learning '98 conference.

(1MB)
Customization Guide - Using ToolBook II Instructor to Modify ToolBook II
Assistant Applications, by Mary Anne Dane
(178K)
Pump Up ToolBook II with ActiveX, by Erik Reitan
(165K)
Creating Extended Objects for ToolBook II, by Tim Barham
(463K)
Advanced Openscript Techniques, by Tim Barham
(30K)
Beyond CBT, by Jan Utterstrom
(39K)
Creating Multimedia Effects and Interactive Content, by Gaylene Zweigle
(212K)
Creating Tools and Plugins for ToolBook II Instructor, by Tim Dutcher
(47K)
Exploiting ToolBook Extended Objects, by Claude Ostyn
(595K)
Revealing the Secrets of ToolBook II Java, by Mike Florence


Tools for Finding Indexed Accounting Research
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/facdev/research/indexed.htm

American Accounting Association journals are indexed and abstracted selectively or entirely in the following print resources and electronic databases:

Accounting Horizons ABI/INFORM (December 1987 to date, full-text articles from January 1992), ABI/INFORM-Global Edition, Academic Search, Academic Search Full Text 1000, Accountants Index, Accounting Articles, Accounting & Tax Database, ArticleFirst via FirstSearch (1992 to date), Business Periodicals Index, Business Source, Business Source Plus, Business Source Plus (Full Text Titles Only), ContentsFirst via FirstSearch (1990 to date), Current Citations, Masterfile Fulltext 1000, Masterfile Fulltext 1000 (Full Text Titles Only), UMI ABI/INFORM - Business Periodicals OnDisc, WilsonSelect via FirstSearch (full-text articles from March 1995).

The Accounting Review ABI/INFORM (October 1971 to date), ABI/INFORM-Global Edition, Academic Search, Academic Search Full Text 1000, Accountants Index, Accounting Articles, Accounting & Finance Abstracts (formerly Accounting & Data Processing Abstracts), Accounting & Tax Database, ASEAN Management Abstracts (Association of South East Asian Nations), Anbar Management Services Abstracts, ArticleFirst via FirstSearch (1992 to date), Book Review Index, Business Index, Business Periodicals Index (1958 to date), Business Publications Index and Abstracts (ceased) Business Source, Business Source Plus, Business Source Plus (Full Text Titles Only), Children's Book Review Index, Computer Abstracts, Computer Literature Index (1968-1991), Content Pages in Management, ContentsFirst via FirstSearch (1992 to date), Contents of Recent Economics Journals, Current Citations, Current Contents: Social & Behavioral Sciences, Economic Literature Index, General Businessfile, Higher Education Current Awareness Bulletin (ceased), Index to Periodicals Related to Law, International Management Information Business Digest (ceased), Journal of Economic Literature, Management Contents (1974 to date), Management and Marketing Abstracts, Masterfile Fulltext 1000, Masterfile Fulltext 1000 (Fulltext Titles Only), Middle East Abstracts & Index, Predicasts, Reference Sources, Research Alert (formerly Automatic Subject Citation Alert), Risk Abstracts, SCIMP (Selective Cooperative Index of Management Periodicals), Social Sciences Citation Index, UMI ABI/INFORM - Business Periodicals OnDisc, UnCover, WilsonSelect via FirstSearch (full-text articles from January 1995), World Banking Abstracts.

Auditing: A Journal of Practice & Theory ABI/INFORM (Spring 1991 to date, full-text articles from January 1992), Academic Search Full Text 1000, Accounting Articles, ArticleFirst via FirstSearch, Business Source Plus, Business Source Plus (Full Text Titles Only), Current Citations, Current Contents: Social & Behavioral Sciences, Masterfile Fulltext 1000, Masterfile Fulltext 1000 (Full Text Titles Only), Research Alert (formerly Automatic Subject Citation Alert), Social Sciences Citation Index.

Behavioral Research In Accounting Academic Search Full Text 1000, Academic Search Full Text 1000 (Full Text Titles Only), Accounting & Tax Database, ArticleFirst via FirstSearch, (1997 to date), Business Source, Business Source Plus, Business Source Plus (Full Text Titles Only), Masterfile Fulltext 1000, Masterfile Fulltext 1000 (Full Text Titles Only).

Issues In Accounting Education Accountants Index (1986 to date), Academic Search Full Text 1000, Academic Search Full Text 1000 (Full Text Titles Only), ArticleFirst via FirstSearch, Business Source, Business Source Plus, ContentsFirst via FirstSearch, Masterfile Fulltext 1000, Masterfile Fulltext 1000 (Full Text Titles Only).

Journal of the American Taxation Association Accountants Index, Accounting Articles, Accounting & Tax Database, ArticleFirst via FirstSearch.

Journal of Information Systems Current Papers in Computers & Control, Current Papers in Electrical & Electronics Engineering , Ergonomics Abstracts, Geographical Abstracts: Physical Geography, INSPEC (The Institution of Electrical Engineers): Computers & Control Abstracts [alternative title: INSPEC, Section C], Physics Abstracts (Fall 1989 to date).

Journal of Management Accounting Research Academic Search Full Text 1000, Academic Search Full Text 1000 (Full Text Titles Only), Accounting & Tax Database, ArticleFirst via FirstSearch, Business Source Plus, Business Source Plus (Full Text Titles Only), Masterfile Fulltext 1000, Masterfile Fulltext 1000 (Full Text Titles Only).



And that's the way it was on April 18, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

Hline.jpg (568 bytes)

Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

Hline.jpg (568 bytes)

April 9, 1999

Watch for a forthcoming issue on network database technologies for the present and the future.  For the present, Bob Jensen is going to spend 21 days this summer with a book called Teach Yourself Active Web Database Programming in 21 Days by Dina Fleet and some other techies at Microsoft (SamsNet, ISBN 1-57521-139-4).  This book is a little dated, but it will prepare me somewhat for the new Office 2000 ways of putting databases on the web.  (Thank you Fred Zapata for the tip on getting this book).

The most important developments underway for the Internet are probably the new standards being developed for SGML, XML, CDI (Microsoft's Channel Definition Format), and RDF (the really big emerging thing).  I will have more on this as soon as I learn more about it myself.  I am presently wading through a wonderful book by Charles Goldfarb and Paul Prescod called The XML Handbook (Prentice-Hall, ISBN 0-13-081152-1).  Don't rush into coding in XML, but you may want to do some reading about it to prepare for the future when XML editors become as common place as HTML editors like FrontPage, HotMetal Pro, Page Mill, etc.


XML lights up
http://www.networkcomputing.com/1007/1007colwalsh.html


When accounting for advertising firms, Susan Jeter recommended Adman from Marketing Resources Plus
http://www.lib.polyu.edu.hk/electdb/DATAPRO/154-1.htm#prod30

Susan did not provide me with the above URL, so I conducted a web search for the above web site.  In the process, I discovered a great listing of URLs of companies selling accounting systems software.  See
http://www.lib.polyu.edu.hk/electdb/DATAPRO/154-1.htm


NIPC (National Infrastructure Protection Center's Wakeup Call on Security)
Especially note the FAQs
http://www.nipc.gov/

The NIPC brings together representatives from the FBI, other U.S. government agencies, state and local governments, and the private sector in a partnership to protect our nation's critical infrastructures.

Established in February 1998, the NIPC's mission is to serve as the U.S. government's focal point for threat assessment, warning, investigation, and response for threats or attacks against our critical infrastructures. These infrastructures, which include telecommunications, energy, banking and finance, water systems, government operations, and emergency services, are the foundation upon which our industrialized society is based.

Our society is increasingly relying on new information technologies and the Internet to conduct business, manage industrial activities, engage in personal communications, and perform scientific research. While these technologies allow for enormous gains in efficiency, productivity, and communications, they also create new vulnerabilities to those who would do us harm. The same interconnectivity that allows us to transmit information around the globe at the click of a mouse or push of a button also creates unprecedented opportunities for criminals, terrorists, and hostile foreign nation-states who might seek to steal money or proprietary data, invade private records, conduct industrial espionage, cause a vital infrastructure to cease operations, or engage in Information Warfare.

Protecting our critical infrastructures in the Information Age raises new challenges for all of us. Above all, it requires a partnership between the government and private industry to reduce our vulnerability to attack and increase our capabilities to respond to new threats. The NIPC provides an important vehicle for carrying that partnership forward.

"Because so many key components of our society are operated by the private sector, we must create a genuine public/private partnership to protect America in the 21st century. Together, we can find and reduce the vulnerabilities to attack in all critical sectors. "

President William J. Clinton

Note from Jensen --- One of my favorite online documents on this topic is entitled "An Introduction to Information Warfare" by Reto Haeni at 
http://www.seas.gwu.edu/student/reto/infowar/info-war.html


Thank you Neil Hannon
Tired of Manipulating Edgar Reports?

Ok, you know how to get free EDGAR ( http://www.sec.gov/edgarhp.htm ) reports, those handy SEC ( http://www.sec.gov/ ) filings all publicly traded companies must file, but you find the information hard to work into your excel spreadsheet? Help is on the way. A small company called Invisible Worlds ( http://www.invisible.net/ )is building a XML based duplicate database that will support deep and complex searches, both within and across documents. It will also return search results in multiple formats, such as text documents or spreadsheets. It may even create on-the-fly graphics that depict the relationships between data or documents. For more information, read Spicing up EDGAR reports.  Read about it and find the link along with other links at at http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html .

Note from Jensen --- do not forget about that other wonderful source of EDGAR reports from Price WaterhouseCoopers at http://bamboo.tc.pw.com/


I faithfully watch and record the weekly show called Computer Chronicles on PBS.  On April 7 the focus was on the following taxation and taxation education software:

Why not start with the IRS? (The best government agency web site on the Internet)
http://www.irs.treas.gov/

IRS Tax Interactive
http://www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/taxi/index.html

The IRS youth education web site on taxation (an IRS  joint development project with the American Bar Association)
http://www.irs.ustreas.gov/prod/taxi/abouttaxi.html

Tax Analysts:  Tax Information Worldwide online
http://www.tax.org/

Blocksoft.com offers many tips on taxes and tax resources
Use Block's new TaxCut 1040EZ Online for FREE.
http://www.blocksoft.com/

Intuit --- it is a market share leader with Quickbooks and TurboTax
http://www.intuit.com/
Also note the Turbo tax contest described at http://www.netguide.com/Site/Detail?id=117856

Microsoft Money Financial Suite
http://www.microsoft.com/products/prodref/699_ov.htm

Money.com is a personal finance web site that offers many tax tips on how to save tax dollars and avoid tax audits
http://www.pathfinder.com/money/plus/index.oft

Money Guide to Taxes
http://www.netguide.com/Money/taxes


There are more extensive and expensive web sites on taxation and tax research.   Some of the heavy duty alternatives discussed by Barbara Karlin at the ATA in San Francisco include the following:.

http://www.taxsites.com/

http://www.taxresources.com/

http://www.abanet.org/tax/sites.html

http://www.willyancey.com/


Tax Helpers from the University of Illinois at Chicago
http://www.uic.edu/depts/lib/collections/govdocs/tax/index.html


Tips from Microsoft on how to avoid tax audits
http://moneycentral.msn.com/articles/tax/prepare/1384.asp


Will Yancey lists a bunch of tax professor web sites at
http://www.willyancey.com/tax_faculty.htm

Since I do not teach taxation, I hesitate to pick out the leading educator web sites in this area.  I will, however, repeat the links to three of my friends who teach taxation.

Amy Dunbar at http://www.sba.uconn.edu/users/ADunbar/dunbaru.htm

Tom Omer at http://omer.actg.uic.edu/

Mark Wolfson at http://gobi.stanford.edu/facultybios/bio.asp?ID=168


The FEI Teleconference Archive of the Financial Executives Institute
You can download the RealAudio files or the transcripts.
http://www.fei.org/teleconf/teleindx.htm


From the Accounting Students Newsletter
Audit Glossary
http://www.accountingstudents.com/research/glossary/glossary.html
(for a more complete listing of accounting, auditing, and technology glossaries see
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm )

Becker’s CPA Cram Time
http://www.accountingstudents.com/toolbox/cramtime

CPA Exam Review Vendors
http://www.accountingstudents.com/research/education

Forum
http://www.accountingstudents.com/forum

Study Break
http://www.accountingstudents.com/toolbox/studybreak


From InformationWeek Online at http://www.informationweek.com/727/database.htm
The hard copy version of the article is available in Information Week, March 29, 1999, Page 30.
Prices start at $150,000.

Database pioneer Michael Stonebraker is introducing new middleware for linking disparate databases across a company. Stonebraker is founder and chief technology officer of Cohera Corp., a startup whose technology provides a unified view of data in real time, regardless of its location or structure.

Other database vendors already sell middleware for linking databases. The drawback to such products is that they're designed for centralized data management, a concept that doesn't work well in many companies, Stonebraker says. Cohera's software gives departmental database administrators control over their systems while providing some level of central management.


Eurotext (learning resources for Europe --- we also wish they could learn to get along with one another)
http://eurotext.ulst.ac.uk:8080/


The Wabash Center Guide to Internet Resources for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion http://www.wabashcenter.wabash.edu/Internet/front.htm


News about speech recognition on computers
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9904024/396684/


For those of you wanting to learn about the latest options for connecting to the Internet, I highly recommend "Pipe Dreams" by Eric Brown in the April 1999 issue of NewMedia, pp. 34-43.  In particular he has a lot to say about DSL.

When @Home Networks and Excite paired up this January, a term that had been bouncing about the periphery of the Internet business suddenly took center stage: broadband portal. Almost simultaneously, Snap announce its high-bandwidth Cyclone service, and America Online joined Bell Atlantic to announce it would hook up AOL users via digital subscriber line (DSL). Last fall, cable provider Comcast launched a portal aimed at cable modem users called OnBroadband.com that provides links to sites with high-band content. And by March, Warner Bros. Online was expected to launch its Entertaindom.

The entire article on line is at http://newmedia.com/newmedia/99/04/feature/Pipe_Dreams.html


The April 9 issue of NewMedia also reports lab testing results on DVD authoring systems (pp. 66-70).  Most of the alternatives get the equivalent of a C rating and none get A ratings in spite of the hefty price tags ranging from $38,000 to $55,000 --- just what every professor can afford on his or her desktop.  Web sites for such software are listed below"
Daikin Scenarist  at http://www.scenarist.com
Minerva Impression http://www.scenarist.com/
sonic Solutions DVDCreator at http://www.sonic.com/
Spruce DVDMaestro at http://www.spruce-tech.com/


News from or about Microsoft

Windows 2000 coming in October?  (Wanna bet?)
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9904011/1014247/

CASE STUDY: TEACHING METHODS ENHANCED WITH WIRELESS LAN
The Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario used Microsoft technology to develop a new Student Information System and enhanced learning methods. The technology solution involves laptop computers, personalized, Web-based information and a wireless local area network (WLAN) throughout the school building.
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/studies/caseh58.htm

Bill Gates’ new book offers numerous "do’s" and "don’ts" for success in the digital age—but recent events compel Eric Lundquist to suggest a few extras --- http://www.pcweek.com/b/pcwt9904025/396797/


Software Technologies @ University of California Santa Cruz Extension
http://www.ucsc-extension.edu/software/index.html

The following is only one of seven major course categories.

Database Systems and Concepts:  Introduction to SQL-92, PL/SQL: Developing Program Units for Oracle Databases, Advanced SQL Programming, Relational Database Concepts and Design, Relational Database Management Concepts,  Relational Database Design,  Mapping Object Architectures to Relational Databases,   Overview of Object and Object-Relational Database Management Systems, Overview of Distributed Database Systems, Building a Data Warehouse, Introduction to Open Database Connectivity (ODBC),  Introduction to Java Database Connectivity (JDBC), Introduction to Oracle RDBMS, Microsoft Access Fundamentals,  Microsoft Access Intermediate, Microsoft Access Advanced Topics, Oracle RDBMS Database Administration, Visual Basic Database Programming, Developing RDBMS Applications Using Oracle Forms, Oracle Data Warehouse Administration, Database Access from Web Applications, Windows Enterprise Application Programming


The biggest fork in the road of life.

Positive alternatives to drugs and gangs
Bajito Onda Foundation And Magazine
http://www.bajitoonda.org/bajito.html

Spot and Stop Extreme Youth Violence
http://www.youthchg.com/hottopic.html

Apathy and Negativity Busters for Youth
http://www.youthchg.com:80/~dwells/nws2apat.html

National Substance Abuse Web Index—NCADI
http://nsawi.health.org/


MLK Web: Educator’s Internet Guide to Martin Luther King Jr.
http://martinlutherking.8m.com/index.html


OffRoad Capital  (advertises that it provides investment deals not available anywhere else)
http://www.offroadcapital.com/


NSSFNS - National Scholarship Service
http://www.nssfns.com


Tips for taking the Linux plunge
http://www.pcweek.com/b/pcwt9904015/2229712/

What does 25% growth mean for Linux?
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,1014279,00.html


Pickle Patch Children’s Bookstore
http://picklepatch.com


A bookstore with some discounting options for orders greater than $15
http://www.fatbrain.com/


MIT's alleged abuses of women
http://www.aaup.org/Wrepup.htm


The Women’s Presses Library Project
http://www.litwomen.org/wplp.html


Thank you Roger Dimick
It’s a free wakeup call when ever you’d like one!
http://www.mrwakeup.com/


International Crisis Group (what crisis in what nation?)
http://www.crisisweb.org/


Games We Used to Play (those were the days my friend)
http://www.streetplay.com/


Deaf Resources
http://www.deafresources.com


English to English translations
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Atlantis/2284/


Performance Practice Encyclopedia (music)
http://www.performancepractice.com


The World of Infectious Disease (some not-so-pleasant exhibitions in medicine and biology)
http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/epidemic/


Online Math Classes
http://www.mathclass.org


Time Magazine and the Presidency (History)
http://www.pathfinder.com/offers/presidents
/


Styleclick.com (marketing)
http://www.styleclick.com/


From ZD Tips on FrontPage
If you’ve set up a navigation bar in your top shared border, you can easily replicate that navigation bar in your bottom shared border. Just right-click on the navigation bar and choose Copy from the shortcut menu. Then, right-click in the bottom border and choose Paste.

You might not want to have two identical navigation bars on the same page, of course, but you could set the second bar up to display text buttons instead of icons. To do so, just double-click it and choose Text in the Orientation And Appearance panel.

You can then adjust the font size of these text links, which gives a really nice lower page navigation tool, similar to many professional sites today. This works especially well if you have a long page. And of course both bars stay in sync with any navigation changes you make to the page.

From—Don York, http://www.york-net.com

And another FrontPage tip
Recently we shared some ways to remove the formatting from text you paste into FrontPage. Here’s one more way:

Simply highlight the text you’ve pasted in and choose Remove Formatting from the Format menu. Or, from the keyboard, press [Ctrl][Shift]Z or hold down [Ctrl][spacebar].

From—Dean Rochford [deanr@junction6.co.uk,www.junction6.co.uk] and Alexander Peijnenborgh [apeijnenborgh@sql-integrator.com, http://www.willemstad.net]


A ZD Tips MS Access Tip
The Snapshot viewer is a great way to allow coworkers who don’t use Access to view static copies of reports. Unlike RTF format, Snapshot format retains all of a report’s lines and other various graphics. When you use the OutputTo command in a macro, Access provides the Snapshot Format as one of the format options. However, the DoCmd.OutputTo method in VBA doesn’t offer a built-in constant for this format. As a result, you may have wondered how to export this file format using VBA.

To do so, in place of the OutputTo method’s regular OutputFormat constant, enter the name of the file format as it appears in the Save As dialog box’s Save As Type dropdown list. So, in VBA your code would look similar to this:

DoCmd.OutputTo acOutputReport, "MyReport", "Snapshot Format", _

"C:\MySnap.snp"


A ZD Tip for converting a table into text in Word 97
If you’ve ever created a table and then later realized you’d prefer to have plain text, there’s no need to cut and paste or drag and drop. To convert your table to text, simply select the entire table and then choose Table/Convert Table To Text. Choose the appropriate option (Paragraph Marks, Tabs, Commas, or Other) from the Separate Text With panel of the resulting dialog box and click OK. Word quickly converts the table to plain text.

You can also use this option to convert text to a table. Just select the text you want to put into a table and select Table/Convert Text To Table


Chris' Internet Chat Pages (CICP for short), is a complete guide to online chat on the internet. They cover many online media such as Web, Java, Telnet, IRC and Chat Programs. Chris has a complete list of over 1100 sites that have chatting available to users, reviews of sites and even our own chat rooms here at CICP. There is also a list of direct chat programs that are easier to use and configure than web chats. 
http://gamereview.hypermart.net/chat/chat.html


A Microsoft Access tip from Bob Jensen
When you are forming a query between many-to-many relationships, it's easy to forget that the
outer join relationship may not be the default relationship.

Suppose you are joining a table of purchase orders with at table of inventory receipts where both tables contain Purchase Order Numbers. The query will not automatically include purchase orders outstanding for goods not yet received.

Assume you are writing a query to detect those outstanding purchase orders. First add both tables to your query's Design View and join them using Purchase Order Numbers. Then double click on the join line and choose the option to include all records from the purchase order table and only received orders from the inventory receipts table. The next step is to write your query to isolate the outstanding orders.



And that's the way it was on April 9, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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April 2, 1999

Tim Berners Lee and his physics buddies in Europe invented HTML scripting and the http protocol.  This creator of the WWW says there’s a new revolution on the horizon for the Internet - and the best way to deal with it is the Resource Description Framework.
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9903253/2231699/


Corporate Reporting Action Newsletter from the Financial Executives Institute, the FEI’s accounting newsletter. Here’s a direct link (albeit on a slow server) to your copy: http://www.fei.org/technical/9903cra.doc


The American Accounting Association's Faculty Development web site has become much more helpful with a variety of online helpers and information.

Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) (I promote this site every chance I get.  Come on you luddites --- become ACEs!)
A database of accounting coursepages and syllabi

Learning Enhancements For Accountancy
Classroom Activities
Specific tools for use in the classroom for instructional development

Curriculum Innovations
Examples and tools for creating change in the accounting curriculum

Instructional Technology Support
Resources for using technology in teaching and instructional development


Webliography of Educational Resources (This site provides links to some great web sites)
Links of interest to educators

Accounting Education Information Bank
Additional resources about accounting education

AEN Faculty Development Updates -- Teaching
Experiential Learning—Service Learning: Linking Accounting
Content to Practice and Real-World Problems

Principles to Teach By: A Teacher's Dozen (Winter, 1998)

Classroom Assessment Tip (Winter, 1998)

Enhancing the Lecture: Using the Pause Procedure (Late
Fall, 1997)

Click on Faculty Development --- Teaching at http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/


Accounting Education Change Commission (AECC) online monographs and reports
http://206.170.119.32/pubs/index.htm

In particular you may want to read the results of the AECC efforts in "The Accounting Education Change Commission Grant Experience: A Summary."

Gary Sundem's forthcoming monograph is not yet available.  The title of that monograph is "The Accounting Education Change
Commission Grant Experience: Its History and Impact."

A CD-ROM of all five monographs is under construction.


The April 1999 issue of the Journal of Accountancy on Page 11 lists the proportion of Information Technology revenues (as a proportion of consulting revenues in general) in six of the top public accounting firms. Those proportions just grow and grow and grow. The future of accounting graduates may lie in the gushing stream of IT revenues.

65% PW
60% AA - Accounting
60% E&Y
58% AA - Andersen Consulting
57% KPMG
50% D&T
40% C&L

Accounting departments and schools in higher education need to gear up accounting AIS programs to meet changing student needs.


Stanford is Number 1 in Business Education (with an utterly amazing average 1998 GMAT of 722)
Harvard ranks Number 2 (with a measly average 1998 GMAT of 689)
US News Online Comparisons of Programs in Higher Education
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/beyond/grad/gradmba.htm


The Wired Professor companion site provides helpers and examples of top faculty web sites
http://www.nyupress.nyu.edu/professor.html/


From the The University of Pennsylvania/ Schoenberg Center for Electronic Text & Images
Lippincott Library Corporate Annual Reports http://www.library.upenn.edu/etext/collections/lippincott/


The AICPA has added a relatively new promotional document for consumers and developers to its website on assurance services for the security seal WebTrustSM
http://www.cpawebtrust.org/


The following web sites are recommended on Page 13 of the April 1999 edition of the Journal of Accountancy:

Hardware and Software Games (for fun)
http://www.firingsquad.com/


corp-ethics Group
http://www.egroups.com/list/corp-ethics/info.html


Thank you Linda Specht
The International Corporate Environmental Reporting Site (Social Accounting) --- A Dutch treat that is not all in Dutch!
http://www.enviroreporting.com/


A Financial Overview of the Managed Care Industry
http://www.kff.org/archive/health_policy/market/marketfacts/marketfacts.html


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week, I feature three ACE professors in the not-for-profit accounting specialty.   Until ACE came along, I found almost nothing on the web from the nfp accounting educators.  The three ACEs listed below have only supplied a limited amount of assignment materials on the web, but at least its a start in the nfp ACE area.

Instructor: Lela D. Pumphrey
Institution: Idaho State University
Course Name: Government and NonProfit Accounting
Textbook: Government and Not-for-Profit Accounting
Author(s): Granof

Instructor: Dr. Sue Kattelus
Institution: Eastern Michigan University
Course Name: Public and Nonprofit Sector Accounting
Textbook: Accounting for Governmental and Nonprofit Entities
Author(s): Earl Wilson, Leon Hay, and Susan Kattelus

Instructor: Terri L. Herron
Institution: University of Montana
Course Name: Government/Nonprofit Accounting
Textbook: Government & Not-For-Profit Accounting
Author(s): Granof
Terri provides some useful hints for each Chapter of the Granof text for those of you who are using this text as an instructor or student.


Thank you Tracey

Data from over 70 Federal government agencies
http://www.fedstats.gov

Web Based Instruction Resource Links from William Milheim and Douglas Harvey at Penn State University
http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/w/d/wdm2/main.htm/

League for Innovation in the Community College
http://www.league.org/index.html#projects

Multimedia Financial News and Services from MicroCap Financial Services, Inc.
http://www.microcap1000.com/


Thank you Gary Tanner (internal auditors aren't supposed to have time to watch television)
For whatever this is worth: Here is something I'll bet you hadn't thought would be an issue for Y2K. Some, if not most, VCR's won't be able to use the programmed advanced recording feature. Do not throw away your VCR in the year 2000. Set the year on 1972 because the calendar days for the weeks and months will be the same as the year 2000.

Please pass this on because you know the manufacturer will not share this information. They will want you to buy a new one that is "Y2K compliant."


Histories of Engineering
http://www.historiesofengineering.org/


News from Microsoft:

Making Computers More Intelligent and Responsive (about artificial intelligence)
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/03-22heckerman.htm

Bill Gates’ New Book Debuts (it's not free online, but the profits go to charity)
http://www.microsoft.com/billgates/book/

Sign up for MSN Internet Access for Chance to Win a Corvette
http://fastlane.msn.com/

Save 50 Percent Off Your Next Flight on American Airlines from MSN Expedia
http://expedia.msn.com/promos/aa/

Web Accessories for Internet Explorer 5
http://www.microsoft.com/Windows/IE/WebAccess/default.asp


I have been using the Command Antivirus f-prot software for some time and I have found it to be easy to install and upgrade and also very unobtrusive. (Some of the popular packages, especially Norton Antivirus, can cause Windows shutdown problems and other glitches.) Command Antivirus is very effective at picking up the W97 class of viruses. The company had new definition files on the Web for Melissa and Papa before most of their competitors. You can try it for a month free at www.commandcom.com.

Stephen L. Fogg Ph.D., CPA
Chairman, Department of Accounting
Fox School of Business and Management
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA 19122
Email: fogg@sbm.temple.edu <mailto:fogg@sbm.temple.edu>
URL: www.sbm.temple.edu/~fogg <http://www.sbm.temple.edu/~fogg>


"The main barrier to electronic commerce lies in the need for applications to meaningfully share information, not in the reliability or security of the Internet. This is due to the variety of enterprise and e-commerce systems deployed by businesses and the way these systems are variously configured and used. It is the central goal of Ontology.Org to solve this problem. "

I don’t know what the solution is but here are some more links:

http://www.rosehill.net/AcctgResources.htm

http://www.ontology.org/index.html

Reply from Bob Jensen to Todd Boyle
I use the following quotation in my teaching:

There are so many choices. You Earthlings don't make it any easier with all your competing middleware --- DCOM/ActiveX, RMI, CORBA. Caffine, Sockets, and HTTP/CGI. Why don't you just build applications instead of fighting middleware wars?

Captain Zog the Martian As quoted in the Foreward of Client/Server Programming with Java and CORBA by Robert Orfali and Dan Harkey (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1997)

I have a paper on this topic at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm


The Gale Group - academic, educational, and business research...an information access web site
http://www.galegroup.com
/


ZeroXenon26 (Free fonts in English and Japanese)
http://www.zx26.com/


From Georgia Tech --- The Videoconferencing Cookbook
http://sunsite.utk.edu/video_cookbook/


For Doug and Guthrie
Universe of Bagpipes (a lot of history here along with the audio files)
http://www.mcn.org/2/oseeler/bagpipes/


Commentaries about museums on the web
http://www.archimuse.com/mw99/speakers/


A web site for and by accounting students
http://www.accountingstudents.com/


Securities Investor Protection Corporation
http://www.sipc.org/


MBA Digest (Helpers for taking the GMAT and TOEFL examinations plus help in choosing an MBA program)
http://www.geocities.com/RodeoDrive/Outlet/5608/


The Picture Collection from Time Inc. (photographs)
http://www.thepicturecollection.com/


The Knoxville Museum of Art presents works about the Holocaust
http://sunsite.utk.edu/neighborhoods/witness/


A Photographic History of the Life and Death of One Factory
http://www.emji.net/bamberger/


Language and Culture
http://home1.gte.net/ericjw1/lang&cult.html


U.S. Air Force Online News
http://www.af.mil/newspaper/


Educate Europe
http://www.educateeurope.com/


Online-library.org (Online resources for educators and students.)
http://online-library.org/


Nielsen//NetRatings
http://www.nielsen-netratings.com/


WholeFoods.com (Where's my pork chop?)
http://www.wholefoods.com/


The Royal Prune University (Good Golly Miss Molly!)
http://www.rpu.com/


Guides to gluing most everything together except marriages and ethnic cultures
http://www.thistothat.com/


See the personalized investment tools at Stockpoint.com
http://www.stockpoint.com/


Calculate your own mortgage payments
http://mortgagequotes.lycos.com/calc.html


Browse for a new automobile
http://www.lycos.com/autos/autosite.html


If Steve says it is a problem, it is most likely not a hoax.
There has been a virus going around the Internet called Happy99.exe. It is spread by e-mail as an attachment. If you receive an e-mail with an attachment called Happy.exe delete it, don’t run it. For more information on this virus see http://www.avertlabs.com/public/stand_alone/rmska.htm or http://www.avertlabs.com/public/datafiles/valerts/vinfo/w32ska.asp
Stephen Perez
Senior Programmer/Analyst mailto:sperez@trinity.edu
Trinity University, 715 Stadium Drive, San Antonio, Texas 78212


I recently plugged Quick View Plus software for reading email attachments. You can read the March 26 edition at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book99.htm

I made an inquiry about whether Quick View Plus reduces the risk of macro-induced viruses. For the good news read the message below that I received from the tech support group at JASC.

Thus far I love my Quick View Plus.
Bob Jensen

Message from JASC Tech Support
Quick View Plus will not activate any Office macros, either native, or VB (office documents support VBScripts). This means that all files that have these will displayed without the macro, and that will mean that you will not infect your system by viewing these files through Quick View Plus.

Thank you for contacting Jasc.

If you have any further questions, problems, or general inquires please feel free to call or write.

Darnell J. Otterson
Jasc Technical Support
612-930-9171
http://www.jasc.com
techsup@jasc.com


Thank you Curtis Brown
Chances are many of you know about this already, but I thought I’d mention that the search engine I now go to first for most purposes is Google (http://www.google.com/). This search engine rates a site higher the more links there are to it from other highly rated sites. Don’t know exactly how they manage that, but in my experience the results are remarkable—if I’m looking for one particular site, it’s usually the number one-ranked result.

I suppose it wouldn’t be so effective for very new or very esoteric sites that no one (yet) knows about. But for sites that have been around long enough for word to get out, it’s very effective. It may not find things that Alta Vista or HotBot or whatever wouldn’t find, but it does a much better job of putting what I’m looking for at the top of the list. The web site describes it as a "Beta" version, but it looks ready for prime time to me.

(example: type "thomas" into Google and the number one result is the library of congress site with information about the US Congress. This site isn’t in the top 50 results for HotBot, Alta Vista, or Lycos (though it is #1 on HotBot’s top ten most visited sites for that search string). Similarly, a search for "Phil Gramm" on Google turned up his Senate homepage as the number one link. This wasn’t in the top 20 on HotBot or Alta Vista; a subpage of his Senate site was around number 10 on Lycos.)

Another nice feature of Google is that they cache the pages: if your search results include a broken link, you can still bring up Google’s cached copy of the page to see what used to be there. The cached pages are text only, but they use the URL for the original page as the base for relative links so that if images are still there they will load properly.


Thank you Neil Hannon

For people who search the Web frequently and want to use it more efficiently, Infoseek Express is a next-generation desktop search product which brings multiple search and information sources together in one place. With Express you can find, explore, and do anything on the Internet faster and easier than before.

Express is different from other search engines because it runs within your Web browser, searches multiple search engines simultaneously, and provides an easier to use, faster interface. In addition, Express has an open architecture that allows for mass distribution, easy updates, and extensive personal customization.
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html

Jensen still goes toYahoo first at
http://www.yahoo.com/


From: Richard Campbell <campbell@rj-int.com> Subject: Free Internet textbooks?

I am interested in getting feedback on the economic feasibility on providing free (advertising-supported) college textbooks. The mode of operation here would be a textbook in a self-extracting executable file. The "book" would have interactive capabilities such as MS Encarta provides, but would also allow the student to print to hard copy some textual material.

Typically a college professor may cover only 75% to 90% of the typical printed textbook. The rest of the paper is wasted (but paid for). My expertise is writing accounting books, so presumably chapters could be sponsored by CPA firms, who would want to recruit the more capable students. The textbook could also provide "product placement" opportunities (like Coca-Cola in movies) to products that college students prefer.

A traditional gripe of college students is the high cost of college textbooks. In accounting, students could pay up to $250 for a textbook and all its supplements. This new economic model would eliminate that complaint. Let me know what you think.

Richard J. Campbell

RJ Interactive http://www.rj-int.com 



And that's the way it was on April 2, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

Hline.jpg (568 bytes)

Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

Hline.jpg (568 bytes)

March 26, 1999

"Who's Killing Higher Education?" by Steve Talbut, Educom Review, March/April 1999, 26-33.  The online version is at http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/html/erm99024.html

A growing consensus holds that new information technologies foretell the end of higher education as we have known it. I suspect this is true. Its truth, however, is not that the technologies are positively revolutionizing education. Rather, what we are watching is more like the end -- the final perfection and dead-end extreme -- of the old regime's shortcomings. (Page 26).

. . .

The most damning testimony against higher education today may be that students have not rebelled; they are evidently incapable of it. Two things prevent such rebellion. One is the inability of high school graduates to take their own education in hand. We do not teach them to become self-learners. I am continually amazed at the number of adults who assume that, if they are to learn anything new, they must "take a class." (Page 29)

The second obstacle, pointed out in Borgmann's analysis, is the fact that, for extraneous social reasons, we insist on the academic degree. It is one of the revealing facts about the Information Age that it is the supreme Age of Credentials. Not just credentials as such (against which I have no complaint), but wooden credentials -- degrees, certificates, diplomas and licenses based solely on "measurable outcomes," such as credit hours and standardized test grades, with scarcely any reference whatever to the actual inner accomplishment and capability of the certificate bearer. (Page 29)

Other feature articles in the March/April 1999 edition include:


The Great Swami, Bob Jensen, looks into his crystal ball and concludes the Y2K problem is overblown with hype by consultants seeking to strip the tit (an old Iowa dairy farmer's term for squeezing the last drop into the bucket).  The Gartner Group, however, has a more reliable crystal ball, and they remain pessimistic.  I think I would trust the Gartner Group more than the off-the-wall Great Swami who never did strip well in a dairy barn.

According to Gartner Group’s latest research, the gulf between companies and countries ready for Y2K and those that lag behind continues to widen.  See http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt99032/1014195/

In the Faculty Club on Wednesday morning, John Howland told us about how one of his Computer Science students experimented with his new sport utility vehicle.  The student moved the clock and calendar ahead to just prior to midnight on December 31, 1999.  At the simulated dawn of Y2K,  the computer controlling ignition froze --- the new vehicle would no longer start.  The new car dealer who put in a replacement computer under warranty pooh-poohed the idea that this was a Y2K problem.  So the student experimented again with the newly installed computer behind the dash board.  Guess what?

Also see Carol Brown's students deal with the accounting issues of Y2K at
http://www.bus.orst.edu/faculty/brownc/Year2000/Year2000.htm


I fine tuned and made some corrections to my Mexcobre Case solution illustrating some accounting theory major concerns with SFAS 133 and IAS 39.  I fact the case raises serious questions about adjusting investments to market values in financial statements.

The case (without solutions) can be viewed at http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133sp.htm

If you are interested in my recommended solutions to the case questions, you will have to convince me that you are not a student enrolled in an accounting course.  Please send me an email message to rjensen@trinity.edu .


For those of you who remain suspicious of my New Bookmarks, we now have The Luddite Reader for doubting Thomases seeking reasons to ignore or pan the  paradigm shifts in commerce, scholarship, research, human behavior, and education. See http://www.ludditereader.com/


A high quality web site (Luddites should take a look at this wonderful cultural and historical studies site)
Guildhall Library and Guildhall Art Gallery
(with a focus on London topography and six centuries of civic life on the river Thames) http://collage.nhil.com/

Another good site in the areas of art, literature and culture (the University of Pennsylvania ‘s Special Collections Library)
http://www.library.upenn.edu/etext/


Things go better with Coke --- read about how Coke Unbottles the Web Potential
http://www.internetwk.com/story/INW19990323S0001
Especially note the web security hardware and software.


Interesting archives on research methodology issues in general
psych-methods
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/psych-methods/


A $49 CD-ROM Internet training program from GK Intelligent Systems, Inc. that has artificial intelligence that claims to do the following in an interactive mode:

  • Coaches like a real teacher
  • Focuses on your learning needs
  • Tailors the lesson plan to you
  • Adapts to your responses
  • Offers several learning styles

See http://www.smartone.com/


From InformationWeek Daily
KPMG, iPass Team On Global VPN Services___ Multinational companies are getting more options for putting together virtual private networks. Consulting firm KPMG and VPN service provider iPass Inc. will reveal this week that they are working together to offer customers a single point of contact for global VPN services.

KPMG plans to bundle applications such as sales-force automation with iPass’ VPN remote-access service and sell the package around the world. By working with iPass, KPMG says it will be able to cut remote-access costs by an average of 30% for domestic users and 70% to 90% for international users. In the United States, companies will pay an average of 5 cents per minute for dial-up access to the Internet, while calls from expensive international locations such as Thailand and Uganda will cost 25 cents a minute. The savings will come partly because iPass users can connect to VPNs via a local call to more than 3,000 Internet access points in 150 countries. KPMG offers services in more than 840 cities in 157 countries. Also, network managers will have to manage only a single high-capacity connection from the Internet, rather than individual access lines in dozens of cities.

KPMG will provide clients with wide area networking services—including network design, implementation, and production rollout—remote-access management, and help-desk support. Increasingly, enterprises want consultants to do more than just provide consulting services. "Users tell us that it slows down the implementation when the users have to negotiate their own contracts," says David Moyer, senior manager for KPMG LLP in Radnor, Pa. Additionally, KPMG can then provide enterprises with one bill for everything from consulting and designing a VPN to actually billing for it.


Accounting and marketing professors can probably create some interesting cases on the software pricing issue.  Companies who develop the software have allegedly got the pricing strategies all wrong.
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,394322,00.html


The New York Times Learning Network
http://www.nytimes.com./learning/


Tools for College Writing
http://www.cabrillo.cc.ca.us/divisions/english/290
/


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week, I feature four ACE professors who classified their courses in ACE as "graduate courses in managerial accounting."  Actually, there is still a shortage of coursepage listing that I would classify as truly "managerial accounting" at a graduate level.  For example, some of the most helpful courses presently listed might easily be classified elsewhere such as in financial accounting, accounting information systems, or auditing.  We need more managerial accounting ACEs at the graduate level.

Instructor: Cindy Peck
Institution: Anderson University
Course Name: Managerial Accounting
Textbook: Managerial Accounting
Author(s): Garrison & Noreen
I found it more informative to visit other courses where Cindy includes more study guide materials.  Her home page is at http://users.anderson.edu/~cpeck/

Instructor: Tanya Lee
Institution: University of Arkansas
Course Name: Asset Management Textbook: Cost Accounting
Author: Maher
This morning Professor Lee's handouts, notes, and presentations gave me "Cannot Be Found" messages.  However, I suspect that she is willing to share these with educators since she registered her coursepage with ACE.

Instructor: James M. Peters
Institution: Carnegie Mellon University
Course Name: Financial Analysis
Course Packet Author: James M. Peters
This appears to be a great web site.  I found a lot of "File Not Found" solution file disappointments.  However, James may be willing to share some of those hidden solution files with educators.  He has some very interesting illustrations and cases in financial statement analysis that are linked through ACE.  This particular course might be better classified under financial accounting, but there are many points of interest for managerial accountants as well.   Bravo James.


Instructor:  Karen Pincus
Institution:  University of Arkansas
Course Name:  Fraud Prevention and Detectiion
Textbook:  None
This course might be better classified under accounting information systems or auditing.  With Karen teaching it, I would love to take this course.   However, the shared materials presently linked in ACE are very limited.  Karen might be willing to share more if contacted privately by accounting educators.


AusWeb99-The Fifth Australian World Wide Web Conference (especially note the abstracts of papers to be presented)
http://ausweb.scu.edu.au/index.htm


Perhaps Netscape will not be killed off by the new Internet Explorer Version 5 from Microsoft.
Sun Microsystems has budgeted $100 million a quarter to AOL for the next 12 quarters (that's $1.2 billion over three years if I'm not mistaken)  to build on and sell software developed by AOL’s newly acquired Netscape http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt99033/1014198/


The Circle of Innovation : You Can't Shrink Your Way to Greatness
by Thomas J. Peters, Tom Peters, Dean LeBaron
ISBN: 0375401571
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0375401571/qid=922193427/sr=1-1/002-1450167-5351653


The American Political Science Association launched Teaching Political Science.
http://www.apsanet.org/teaching


ZDU’s roster of self-study technology training courses has grown with over 100 asynchronous ways for you to learn technology at your own pace.http://www.zdu.com/catalog/all.asp#tut  
While it lasts on the web, you can also read about short (like 15 minutes) courses at
http://www.zdu.com/catalog/all.asp?Sort=date#tut

Also see HyCurve, Inc. for training courses
http://www.hycurve.com/skills/index.html


Summer Computer Camps (not just for kids)
http://www.computer-camp.com/


Online Continuing Education courses for Healthcare Professionals
http://www.onlinece.net

The Andrews School (online asynchronous training courses in medical record keeping, billing, etc.)
http://www.transcription1.com


Bryon Tosoff; piano and theory teacher
http://members.tripod.com/~TOSOFF/


The webex.com site is featured in Newsweek, March 22, 1999, Page 11.
http://www.webex.com/

Webex.com is the first Web-based meeting center that allows you to meet and work together spontaneously with your friends and colleagues. At webex.com, create your own private meetings where you can share documents, show presentations, surf the web and work together on any application. Once you've started a meeting, it is easy to invite others directly into your meeting room. There is no software installation and no complicated network configuration. With webex.com, working on the Web is as easy as dialing a phone.

WebEx Offices - Set up your virtual office at webex.com! Conduct Web-based meetings in your customized WebEx office. Chat - adds text-based chat to your WebEx meetings. Teleconferencing - aggressively priced conference calls.


Bible Study for Ordination
http://www.ordination.org


Islam and education
http://freewww.ns1.net/members/zurichwala/


MOST Clearing House on Religious Rights—UNESCO
http://www.unesco.org/most/rr1.htm


International law
http://www.asil.org/


Human Progress Network
http://www.hpn.org


BRIDGE gender issues
http://www.ids.ac.uk/bridge/


Links to living and religion --- from Johnnie and Anne
http://max@maxpages.com/redroverbunch/Home


SpamCop - technology for Internet security
http://spamcop.net/


News From Lotus
Bringing knowledge management to the enterprise, Lotus will roll out new tools and services built around its forthcoming Domino upgrade http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt99033/396184/


BusinessWeek e.biz
http://ebiz.businessweek.com/


In a previous edition of New Bookmarks, I discussed digital MP3 compression that puts hours of highest quality audio on a single CD and/or allows you do download highest quality audio from the web.  Check out Epitonic:
http://www.epitonic.com/

And then there is Syko’s Page
http://syko.hypermart.net


If you enjoy chamber music
http://www.ahntrio.com/


National Center for Children’s Illustrated Literature
http://www.nccil.org/


Unclaimed Baggage Center --- yuppie deals galore for show off brand names
http://www.unclaimedbaggage.com/


Are you feeling old?
AARP Research Center  http://research.aarp.org
AARP Webplace  http://www.aarp.org/


Yahoo! Coupons - free online shopping coupons
http://coupons.yahoo.com/


Tony's Poems web site
http://members.tripod.com/~tonycornella/Introduction.html


Some funny quips from bored flight attendants to cheer up or frighten the hell out of bored passengers
http://www.zdnet.com/yil/content/depts/forward


Self Test Software
http://www.stsware.com


Radical Films (for political history buffs and old hippies)
http://radfilms.com


Outpost Auctions - place your bids.
http://www.OutpostAuctions.com/default.htm


PI: Team Chess Game (for multiple players)
http://www.kidslovechess.com


Alcohol Industry & Policy Database
http://www.andornot.com/marin/


From ZD Tips on Education World
Whether you're a teacher, student, or parent, if you're looking for information on education, we've got a site for you. Education World is a database of 110,000-plus educational sites available on the Internet. The site features a search engine that lets you search the database with keywords or use advanced search options with seven specially designed criteria to help limit your searches. You can also jump to special featured topic subjects like regional resources, K12 and universities online, event calendars, mailing lists, and more. But Education World doesn't stop there, it also provides a subject category list that's organized like Yahoo! in 20 different subject categories. In addition, you'll find articles on lesson planning, news, curriculum, books, administration, and educational sites. Education World is located at http://www.education-world.com/


From InformationWeek Daily
AT&T Launches Local ATM Service
AT&T began its efforts to bring competitive services to the local market yesterday with the debut of local asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) services, its Transparent LAN service, and new service-level agreements for ATM and frame relay.

The local ATM service will provide customers with an end-to-end ATM offering. "Customers will have one contract, one bill, and a single point of contact for customer care for their local and long-distance ATM," says Kristine Demareski, AT&T’s local packet services product director. The Transparent LAN service will convert Ethernet, Fast Ethernet, Token Ring, and Fiber Distributed Data Interface traffic to ATM traffic using an AT&T-supplied LAN-to-ATM Concentrator at the customer’s premises. It’s aimed at customers who aren’t ready to invest in ATM equipment.

For more information on ATM-type stuff see http://www.techweb.com/se/directlink.cgi?INW19990315S0046 and my glossary at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm


AECM users have already seen the following  helpful message from David Fordham.   I have repeated it here to place a permanent record into my New Bookmarks archives.

From David Fordham
I assume you mean connectivity for the Internet and public network communications (phone), so if you actually meant connectivity for something else, please disregard this reply.

Right now, the only two large-scale options for connections via satellite are (a) fixed-base with the geostationary satellites (the K-band pizza dishes on the side of apartment buildings, or the huge C-band dishes in the rural farmyards), or (b) the LEO satellites, intended for mobile hand-held or other "non-pointed" devices.

I doubt you mean the geostationary connections, since each one of these would probably require a licensed transmitter, and require much more power for that transmitter than you would want to pull through your house wiring (126,000 miles is a long way for a microwave radio wave to travel and still maintain its signal integrity).

If you mean LEO satellites, you don’t need to wait. Several

providers are already selling services on these. For example, see: http://www.iridium.com

But do you really need such a service right now?

Most Internet providers I’m aware of provide support for V.90 over POTS. Even if there isn’t a local phone number for your provider, almost all of them have toll-free connect lines which support V.90.

V.90 works over POTS. Your throughput will not be as fast as advertised (*very* few people actually realize transfer rates of 56kbps), but for most home-office applications, it should be sufficient, even for generalized web browsing. It may not be sufficient for real-time video and audio applications, but most of those are dependent upon your switching center, anyway.

If V.90 is not fast enough for you, you can still use V.90 for the UPLOADS (remember, very little is going FROM your client computer TO the Internet), and use satellite for your DOWNLOADS (data coming FROM the Internet TO your computer, such as web pages, weathermaps, video clips, etc.) over the Iridium and other LEO constellations.

Most satellite Internet services I’m aware of indeed utilize POTS for uploads, and the satellite link for downloads only. In fact, I’m not aware of any satellite services which allow satellite connection for UPloads. So any way you slice it, you’re probably going to utilize a V.90 modem over POTS one way or another.

Now, for my personal suggestion:

If you can wait a couple of years, I expect to see mucho change in the pricing of satellite services in the coming 24-48 months.

Right now, today, in our "backwater" locale, way out here in the boonies, (the agricultural Shenandoah Valley, largest town within a five-county radius is population 45,000), we have digital PCS providers offering "unlimited connect time" packages for as little as $75 per month, long-distance included (yes, amazing isn’t it! unlimited long distance INCLUDED along with unlimited air-time, on the handheld digital PCS "cellular" phones (PCS isn’t really cellular, but to the consumer it appears the same).

And regarding pricing structures, let me take a side trip by mentioning that I personally have a land-line POTS unlimited long-distance service for $39 per month at home. Four years ago, who would have predicted unlimited long-distance service, both in-state and out-of-state, U.S. plus Canada, 24-hours per day, 7 days per week, for a flat fee of only $39 per month?! "Ridiculous," I would’ve said four years ago. But here it is today.

The Iridium and other satellite constellations will be facing increasing competition from these type services. So we will probably see all kinds of innovative pricing strategies in the year 2000 and 2001. Remember, a satellite service is heavy on fixed costs, low on incremental costs. So as long as capacity exists, it is to their best interest to sign up new customers for a song. (... and you can’t begin to imagine the digital capacity available in a 2 gigahertz-wide band of wireless spread-spectrum RF in the sub-millimeter wavelength band!).

David R. Fordham, CPA, CMA, Ph.D.
James Madison University, School of Accounting
Mail Stop Code 0203, Harrisonburg, VA 22807
Phone: 540-568-3024, Fax: 540-568-3017, Email: fordhadr@jmu.edu
Homepage: http://cob.jmu.edu/fordhadr/



And that's the way it was on March 26, 1999.

Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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March 19, 1999

I cannot give a higher recommendation for reading about innovative technology than the article by John Mann entitled "Message Engine Drives Delta Data:  A Case Study,"  Application Dvelopment Tools, March 1999, 41-46.  In my viewpoint, this should be a "must" for inclusion in virtually every information systems and/or accounting information systems course.   The online version is available in the March 1999 (Current Issue) links at
http://www.adtmag.com/

You can read more about middleware at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/260wp/260wp.htm


I recommend that all researchers, especially accounting researchers, take a look at the favorable book review by Dennis Patz that begins on Page 121 in the January 1999 issue of The Accounting Review.   The book being reviewed is entitled Critique of Accounting:  Examination of the Foundations and Normative Structure of an Applied Discipline (Westport, CT:  Quorum Books, 1995) by Richard Mattessich.  I recall receiving unsigned letter years ago claiming, in effect, that esteemed accounting researchers were emperors without clothes in fiefdoms of little importance to the real world.  This was followed with a signed and widely circulated, albeit unpublished, document by several of the top researchers in prestigious research universities that raised the same concerns.  Mattesich tackles these issues in his book.  In the book review, Professor Patz lists those concerns that still haunt us and researchers in many, if not most, other disciplines.  In accounting, however, it is more difficult to pinpoint where research of those that control the tenure gates in the most prestigious research institutions has added genuine value to the practicing profession.

Booknews, Inc. , February 1, 1996
A critical examination of contemporary accounting, investigating the methodology and reasoning process appropriate for the discipline. It aims at a synthesis of the two major opposing camps of present-day academic accounting: the "critical-interpretive view" of Great Britain and the "positive accounting theory" of America. Among the topics in 12 chapters are the historic and cultural mission of accounting; valuation models, capital maintenance, and instrumental hypotheses; and what has post-Kuhnian philosophy of science to offer?

It would be interesting to turn the tables and process trace major changes in the accounting profession.  Where and from whom did the seminal contributions to practice arise?  For example, I have always admired the credit given by Bob Kaplan to cost accountants at John Deere for originating some of the seminal activities-based costing changes in practice that are belatedly soaring in popularity in business firms and other organizations.  In a plenary session (New York City in August 1994) of the American Accounting Association, Joel Demski claimed that about the only academic contribution to practice was dollar-value LIFO.  Knowing Joel, he was probably exaggerating with tongue-in-cheek, but then again was he really exaggerating in a featured presentation in front of over 2,000 accounting educators, practitioners, and researchers in the audience?  Certainly academic research has had an impact upon standard setting and education.  It is less clear what that impact would have been inter alia in the real world without being forced via changed standards.  In any case, the book itself is probably the best of the Mattesich treatises on research.


Thank you Dan Price for this lead on an excellent environmental report web site
http://www2.gol.com/users/hsuzuki/report.html


My innovative software feature of the week is called Quick View Plus 5.1.
This product comes for the same company (Jasc Software) that sells the wonderful and inexpensive Paint Shop Pro.
Quick View Plus lets you view email attachments when you may not have the software installed to view those attachments.  For example, you can read an Excel spreadsheet on a computer that does not have any spreadsheet software.  I just received some pictures from my wife's brother in Germany.  I could not view these pictures as email attachments.  But they can be viewed with Quick View Plus.  No mention is made of virus protection, but my hunch is that there is virus protection here since you can see the documents (like Excel spreadsheets) with less risk of engaging the macros that allow viruses to do nasty things to your computer.  You may want to view some documents with Quick View even if you have software like Excel that will stimulate nasty viruses embedded in macros.  Quick View will also do the following:

  • Allows you to easily view a wide variety of formats: text, spreadsheet, graphic, database, presentation, compressed files, and html.
  • Lets you view files and attachments as they were meant to be seen, with true display of important formatting features such as fonts, styles, columns, tables, headers, footers, page numbers, footnotes, embedded graphics, and OLE objects. Hyperlinks can also be seen and activated from within QVP.
  • Manages all your documents copy and paste to create new files; make old docs in old apps into new documents, rename or remove old documents.
  • Locates just what you need fast with a powerful search and hit highlight function. Prints all or part of any file and provides fully formatted output. Integrates with all major e-mail and groupware programs: Microsoft Exchange, Outlook, Eudora, Netscape Mail, and Lotus Notes.
  • Supports new formats: Paint Shop Pro, MS PowerPoint 97; Lotus WordPro 96 & 97; RTF 1.5; vCard, Kodak Photo CD.
  • Supports new integrations and browsers: Eudora 4; Outlook 98; Outlook Express; Lotus cc:Mail 8.1; Internet Explorer 4; Netscape Navigator

I took advantage of the download trial offer at
http://www.jasc.com/qvp.html


I have updated my listing of accounting and finance glossaries along with my own Technology Glossary at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm


I am active in the FEI.  Belatedly, the FEI has some technology helpers.  An archive of presentations is now available at http://www.fei.org/download/dl_index.htm
One presentation you may want to download is Gartner Group?s technology trends for the next five years.  This presentation summarizes the state of key technologies and assigns probabilities to some possible future scenarios.

There is also a new FEI Express listserv for members.


Associated Colleges of the South Technology Fellowships (I had one --- they're great).   If you are in an ACS institution, now is the time to apply.
http://www.newhomemaker.com/


Harvard will help educators integrate newer learning technologies
http://www.cdlib.org/


Grade tracking software called GradeQuick
http://www.jacksoncorp.com/


Thompson Publishing and VarsityBooks.com are moving toward bypassing campus book stores with online sales of 400,000 titles and up to claimed 40% discounts.  Required books for courses in more than 50 colleges are now listed online.
http://www.varsitybooks.com/


Career life services and instructional tools from Knowledge Universe
http://www.knowledgeu.com/


From Lycos
TAX GUIDE
http://investing.lycos.com/ac/taxes.asp

PERSONALIZED STOCK NOTIFIER
http://www.dealtime.com/Notifier/Lycos/LycosNotifier.htm

CAR FACT SHEETS
http://www.lycos.com/autos/autosite.html

TO SCRATCH & WIN
http://superbowl.lycos.com/contest/

Note from Jensen:  CNN reports that less a year ago, 2% of the users of a web page with advertising clicked on the link of the advertiser.  This has declined to a current rate of 1%.  There is software available to suppress advertising on a web page.  As a result, commercial web sites are resorting to attractions other than advertising.  Free services and contents are the current rage on the web.  For example, see the above examples from Lycos.  Be very careful, however, that you are dealing with the true web site of a reputable company.  Beware of any contests that request money.  Even if the contests are free, however, the vendor may be asking for information from you that can be sold or bartered.  I have a case dealing with some of these issues at
http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5342/262wp/262case1.htm


PC Week’s Fast-Track 100 spotlights technology innovators in government and education and finds the public sector turning Web-ward to deliver new services and cut costs.
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt99031/393441


My featured accounting educator this week is Carol E. Brown at Ohio State University
http://www.bus.orst.edu/faculty/brownc/

Carol shares the following materials that are linked at her web site:

Related links


If you know any accounting educators with helpful materials on the web, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these professors email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

This week, I feature three ACE professors in the area of Accounting Information Systems (Ceil's excellent web site was acknowledged previously)

Instructor:  Lisa Austen
Institution:  University of Arkansas
Course Name:  Accounting Technology
Textbook:  Accounting, Information Technology, and Business Solutions
Author(s):  Hollander, Dennam Cherrington
Lisa has some cases and case solutions on the web.  She has removed some, but my guess is that she will share them with you if you send her an email message.

Instructor:  W. Darrell Walden, Ph.D., CPA
Institution:  University of Richmond
Course Name:  Accounting Information Systems
Textbook:  Building Accounting Systems
Author(s):  Perry & Schneider
Darrell provides a lot of helpful materials, including multiple choice questions with solutions.  This is an especially helpful web site for those of us teaching Microsoft Access applications in accounting.  You can also download the team PowerPoint presentations.  Hew uses Great Plains general ledger software.  Bravo for this excellent web site Darrell.

Instructor:  Marcus D. Odom
Institution:  Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
Course Name:  Accounting Information Systems
Textbook:  Accounting Information Systems: A Database Approach
Author(s):  Murthy and Groomer (Jensen also uses this online AIS textbook)
Among other things, Marcus shares his AIS discussion board.   This course also uses the Great Plains general ledger package.  There are extensive study aids and PowerPoint presentations that can be downloaded.


Intensive CPA Exam Review
http://www.intensivecpa.com


From Neil Hannon
The Big Five firms have several advantages when it comes to winning consulting contracts. Ability to take on large assignments, brand name recognition and reputation are among the factors that typically land major contracts. The PEN, or Premier Expert Net, is about to level the playing field for smaller consulting firms. From their Web site at PENgroup.com, a new online group of virtual consultants has organized over 650 consulting firms into a consulting network. The firms in the network must pass a strict quality control process and give the PEN group membership fees and percentages of contracts won.
The Pen Group's web site is at http://www.pengroup.com/


New online MBA Program from SUNY Empire State College (competency-based academic standards)
Limited to 50 students
mba@sescva.esc.edu


Virtual University Net (helps you find networked higher education and training courses)
http://www.users.uswest.net/~phdtom/home.htm


BellSouth Education Gateway
http://k12.bellsouth.net


I especially recommend an article by D. Mesher entitled "Designing Interactiveities for Internet Learning," Syllabus, March 1999, pp. 16-20.   The online version is not yet available, but it will be up soon at 
http://www.syllabus.com/


News from Macromedia
Here is the second set of tips in the tutorial series provided by industry expert, Sandra Bray (by way of Ziff Davis Journals). We’ll continue this new Dreamweaver series from the "Interactive Designer" newsletter, along with helpful hints on creating a client-side image map. Visit http://www.zdjournals.com/go/dreamweaver and select the "Full Article" link.

And why not get your own copy of the "Interactive Designer" by clicking one of the "FREE ISSUE" icons throughout both the tutorials?

There’s more! -- "lynda.com" is offering "Learning Dreamweaver 2"  (now!); and "Learning Fireworks 2" (by the end of April). Order your copies online at: http://store.lynda.com

What’s more, Alexandra Barrett of PC World reports, "Macromedia Makes a Big Flash: Two-thirds of Web users have [Macromedia’s] fast graphics viewer and don’t know it." Read what else PC World says at: http://www.pcworld.com/pcwtoday/article/0,1510,9939,00.html


eCode - manage your online identity
http://www.ecode.com/


Enhanced Learning (a web site devoted to newer technologies for learning)
http://enhanced-learning.org


It's never too late to learn Ben
Simulations Plus, Inc. creates advanced simulation software for education, pharmaceuticals, and industry. Our exciting new FutureLab™ educational software series, for science curriculum, enables teachers and students to quickly and easily perform simulated laboratory experiments on a personal computer.
http://www.simulations-plus.com/


Byte is back.
http://www.byte.com/


California Digital Library (Browse or Search)
http://www.cdlib.org/


Internet Cafes Guide
http://www.netcafes.com/


Bob
Thank you for linking to The New Homemaker! Every mention helps get the word about my site out, and I appreciate it.Regards,
Lynn Siprelle
Editor, TNH
http://www.newhomemaker.com/


Journalism's Slipup.com (Yahoo says:  "To err is human, to forgive is online.")
http://www.slipup.com/


American History
A full-text version of Edward Bellamy’s, "Looking Backward from 2000 to 1887".
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/hypertex.html

Also see  Ollie’s History Place
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Workshop/2224


Inka Empire
http://members.tripod.com/~Gialma/Inka.html

Mysteries of the Nile - Land of the Pharaohs.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/egypt/


News from and about Microsoft
Probably the most important news is what Bill Gates calles "a big milestone" in the history of Microsoft.
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,1014167,00.html

Download Internet Explorer free from
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/ie5/default.asp

Maximize your search capabilities
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/ms/preferredpc.htm

Windows 98 Second Edition?
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt99032/1014132/

Free Windows Media Player
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/mediaplayer/download/default.asp

What’s New in Outlook 2000?
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/guide2000/office2000/outlook2k.htm

The Biggest Online Sidewalk Sale - and Sweepstakes
http://national.sidewalk.msn.com/link/31316

SHOP.MICROSOFT.COM at:
http://shop.microsoft.com

A letter from Microsoft concerning privacy (including an identifier patch utility)
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/03-08custletter2.htm

Are You Stressed Out? Take the WomenCentral Stress Test
http://womencentral.msn.com/women/health/stressquiz.asp

Speaking of stress, Microsoft is reorganizing to blur the lines between operating systems and applications.  Could it be that Bill Gates is trying to make it difficult to break up his empire?
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9903121/2225041/


Watch out Bill Gates --- Apple has bounced back from 5% to 10% of market share!
Its colorful iMac is now the top selling PC since overtaking the Compaq Presario 5050 as the top selling PC
Sadly, I think Apple's market share on higher education campuses is still plunging, but those iMacs make great XMAS gifts for homes and apartments.
http://www.apple.com/

From InternetWeek
Apple Computer put an Internet and networking shine on its server-based operating system unveiled this week. Mac OS X includes tools for centralized configuration of clients, and also includes the Apache Web server and the WebObjects 4.0 application server. Apple also said it plans to distribute the core of the operating system as free and open source. That includes, basically, everything but the graphical user interface and graphics tools.
http://www.internetwk.com/news0399/news031699-7.htm


Library of the Workplace
http://www.cord.org/workplacelibrary/


Interactive Drama, Inc.(uses Speech Recognition technologies to learn Spanish)
http://www.idrama.com/Roberto.htm


I am so absent minded that my secretary has to remind me of everything except lunch.  If you cannot afford a secretary, you can get a virtual secretary at LifeMinders
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html

Be this as it may, I am not as absent minded as John von Neumann.  He purportedly traveled to Philadelphi and then phoned his wife to inquire about why he was in Philadelphia.   With LifeMinder and a Palm Pilot, Professor John von Neumann in modern times would not need to telephone his wife (who might have been out of the house, thereby leaving her famous husband lost in a Philadelphia phone booth).


Worldwide Speech and Communication
http://www.flash.net/~speech


Equity - women and money.
http://www.equitymag.com/


MJuice - digital songs for your desktop.
http://www.mjuice.com/

Did you see the NY Times , March 8, Page B1 article entitled "Musicians Want a Revolution Waged on the Internet?"  "Optimists" (this is the word used by the NY Times)  think that the music industry will become a cottage industry where musicians will bypass recording music companies and radio stations in order to offer their best material directly online (a bit like Branson musicians bypassed Nashville).  There are various industries where the "revolution" has already been one, including high-end art galleries and low-end sleazy (husband with hidden video camera) porn cottage industries.  The jury is still out as to whether online "book" authors' cottage industries will drive publishers out of business or whether "educators" will drive vocational and higher education schools out of business in some disciplines.  Richard Campbell leans toward the "optimism" side of things in his postings on the aecm (especially from the standpoint of the publishing industry).
http://www.rj-int.com/

Also see the excellent online cottage industry information systems textbook offerings at Cybertext
http://www.cybertext.com /


Montessori Assistants to Infancy
http://site101185.primehost.com/AtoI.html


Native Traditions Circle
http://www.clubhomepage.com/native


Mixed drinks/cocktails from PartySchool.com
http://www.partyschool.com/drinks/maindrinks.htm


This is nice to know but sad to learn about.  Perhaps there will be fewer bugs with Office 2000 in place.
The last two years I have used MS Project in my systems analysis and design class, for hands-on project scheduling work. MS Project, I have concluded, is the buggiest package, and the most poorly designed package, that MS has ever released.

Never again. Does anyone know of any good packages out there that can be used to teach the fundamentals of project management? Shareware/Freeware is OK by me.

Thanks.
Joe Brady
MIS Instructor, Accounting & MIS, College of B&E
University of Delaware


Econophysics --- a new buzz word and area of research
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/finance-and-physics/


From the Scout Report
Georgetown University Library’s NAICS Clearinghouse
http://gulib.lausun.georgetown.edu/swr/business/naics.htm

Investor Insight (for Eastern Europe)
http://www.invest.centraleurope.com/

Fortune’s Best Mutual Funds 1999
http://cgi.pathfinder.com/fortune/investor/1999/03/15/thedetails.html

SocialFunds.com
http://www.socialfunds.com/

Stocks.com
http://www.stocks.com/

Gen X Guide to Finance
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/student/dwgenx.htm



Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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March 12, 1999


I have updated my listing of accounting and finance glossaries along with my own Technology Glossary at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm


Many, probably most, accounting professors and practitioners argue that SFAS 133 is too complex for financial statement preparers and investors. One simplification being advocated by former FASB Chairman Dennis Beresford (Journal of Accountancy, March 1999, pp. 65-67), the International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC), and many others is to adjust all derivative financial instruments to fair value and delete the enormous complexity of making decisions as to what contracts must be versus what contracts cannot be adjusted to fair value.

I have my doubts about fair value adjustments in many instances.  And that is not just because one of my professors years ago at Stanford University, Yuji Ijiri, was and is forever more an advocate (at least in elegant theory) of historical cost.

My real-world Mexcobre Case has been revised.  This case  illustrates a real-world instance where, in my analysis, adjusting derivative instruments to fair values is highly misleading to investors. The valuable copper price swap should not be booked at   anything other than zero in this real-world case.  This would be true even if the particular derivative instruments in the Mexcobre Case were traded in markets that were wide and deep (which is not the situation in the Mexcobre Case).

The Mexcobre Case actually supports the arguments of many bankers who contend that SFAS 133 leads to misleading financial statements if financial instruments derivatives are adjusted to fair value each period.

My revised Mexcobre Case is located at http://WWW.Trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133sp.htm

My revised teaching notes and case solutions are available to accounting educators and practitioners.  You may request free access by sending me an email message to rjensen@trinity.edu .


Bernie Milano discusses KPMG's very serious efforts to break the glass ceiling
http://www.accountingstudents.com/toolbox/workingworld/


Paint Shop Pro will capture all or your selected part of any screen and make virtually any kind of graphics file. PSP will also read most any graphics file and convert it to most any other type of graphics file. It is also relatively easy to covert most graphics pictures to text using OCR programs such as my favorite Omni Pro.

The PSP software is the best buy in the history of Windows. For layering, I also use the expensive and user-unfriendly Adobe Photoshop, but for most of my graphics captures the inexpensive PSP will do the job. You can download a trial version of PSP from http://www.jasc.com

I might add that I also really like Lotus ScreenCam for making animations or videos of successions of screen images. The current price from PC Zone is only $28. This software does not come with a user's manual because the software is so easy to use that no manual is necessary. You can also capture audio, although Brian Zwicker notes that even professionals have problems with ambient noise (I also have this problem).    Lotus ScreenCam is great when you want to show students a succession of steps (software usage, journal entries, mathematics calculations, statistical tests, etc.) and narrate while you go. The reader is free (and not even necessary if you save the animation as a video).

In response to Brian's question, I don't think the quality of the audio or the video has a much of anything to do with whether you use Lotus ScreenCam, Microsoft Camcorder, or Hyperionics. HyperCam.

I will comment on Lotus ScreenCam scm animation files versus avi video files. When I make an animated scm file it looks great and requires a small amount of disk space, say 249Kb of space for a 62 second animation. If I save the same file as a video avi file the same segment requires up to 55,092Kb of disk space for the highest quality video.

A minor difference is that the scm player must be downloaded to play the 249Kb file or any other scm files (this free scm player is very quick and easy to download and install from the Lotus web site). Most computers already have some capability to play avi files without downloading a proprietary player.

The essence of this problem arises in terms of web bandwidth. I just downloaded a 3,153Kb avi file from Ronald's web site at http://www.sbea.mtu.edu/rrtidd/avi/Excel/excel97.htm . It took 78 minutes to download across a T1 line starting at 1:22 p.m. on Thursday, August 11. Of course the download would have been much faster when I arrived at work before 5:00 a.m. At either time of day, however, the download would have been much faster if Ronald had instead made a scm or other animation file of the same screen events the file would have been much smaller and flowed over the web much more efficiently.

As a compliment to Ronald, I want to stress that the quality of the audio and video is magnificent. However, It took 78 minutes to download a 3,153Kb file that only yields 45 seconds of playing time. One of the reasons for the high quality is his high sampling rate used in capturing the audio and video. A high sampling rate yields great quality at a great cost in terms of file size and bandwidth requirements on the Internet. I doubt that the software used matters nearly as much as the video/audio sampling rate, the quality of the microphone, the quality of the computer's capture hardware, and the screen resolution and video adapter quality of the computer itself (since we are talking about capturing successions of screen images here). I would opt for the Lotus ScreenCam scm file unless higher quality audio is absolutely essential. Users will save immense amounts of downloading time and disk storage space savings.

One drawback of the Microsoft Camcorder and the Hyperionics. HyperCam appears to be that they will only capture avi video files. Lotus ScreenCam provides a choice between the scm animation or the avi video options.

In any case, the relevant web sites are as follows:

Lotus ScreenCam free trial version
http://www.lotus.com/home.nsf/tabs/screencam
$28 PC Zone price at 800-419-9663

Microsoft Camcorder
Free inside the MS Office 97 Package
Reviewed at http://winweb.winmag.com/library/1996/1296/12r48.htm

Hyperionics. HyperCam
http://www.hyperionics.com/
$30 for downloading at the Hyperionics web site


If you know any accounting educators teaching doctoral courses, please ask them to link their materials  in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) web site at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm
Please send these luddites email messages today and urge them to share as much as they can with the academy by easily registering their course pages with ACE. 

Only two accounting educators have registered their doctoral program coursepages with ACE.  Special thanks to the following good guys.

Jagdish S. Gangolly
Institution: State University of New York at Albany
Course Name: Inf 703 Information Organisation
Textbook: Automatic Text Processing
Author: Gerard Salton
The Adobe Acrobat course materials and the many web links should be of great help to Accounting Information Systems instructors in undergraduate as well as graduate courses.

Instructor: Jagdish S. Gangolly
Institution: State University of New York at Albany
Course Name: Inf766 Quantitative Techniques in Information Science
Textbook: Modern Applied Statistics with S-Plus
Author: Venables & Ripley
This course has less shared information than the AIS course above, but it provides a good syllabus and some other materials for the quantitative foundations of information systems and data analysis.

Instructor: Dan Stone
Institution: Univ. of Illinois
Course Name: Accountancy Research Orientation for Ph.D. Students
Textbook: (1985). Basic Research Methods in Social Science. New York, McGraw Hill, ISBN 0-07-554463-6.
There is a great section of this course entitled "What is research?" along with an interesting assortment of readings.  There is another section on "The Craft of Scholarship."  I could not get Lecture and Review materials buttons to work at Dan's web site this morning, but the fact that the buttons are there indicates that he must intend to share some of the materials.


Gleim's CPA Exam Preparation software is available as a free academic site license to colleges and universities.  Students who use the free online campus network materials may also purchase the Gleim books and software for a discounted price of $100. 
http://www.gleim.com/

Becker reports only 12% candidates sitting for the CPA examination pass it on the first go around
http://www.accountingstudents.com/toolbox/cramtime/
The Becker prep course uses a lot of video presented in classes given in many cities across the U.S.

Micromash has a $595 price to individuals, but I could not find any information about a site license at
http://www.micromash.com/

Because of the multimedia and some other features, I prefer Bisk's TotalTape multimedia CPA package and frequently demo it in my technology road shows.  Its site license is $750 on a campus.  A student or former student can get it for $375 or $475 depending upon whether their campus or alma mater has a site license.
http://www.bisk.com/


I lost some of my trust in the U.S. Department of Education data tables.

The source of most AACSB enrollment data is the U.S. Department of Education. The USDE   web site is at http://nces.ed.gov.  One nice feature at this web site is a form where you can request data for the USDE to look up for you (with human reference librarians in this day in age?). The form is at http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/index.asp.

One really interesting education fact document is at http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/FAQTopics.asp?type=3 This points, among other things, to the Most Popular Majors in higher education at http://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/470.asp?type=3#majors.

In 1994/95 there were 43,940 (less than 44% were men) accounting undergraduate degrees awarded out of 234,323 degrees in business and administrative studies. The total, according to the USDE, for all four and five year bachelors degrees was 1,160,134. Business seems to be clinging to its lead in popularity and has more than double the number of graduates as education colleges and departments. Accounting has about as many graduates as the entire number of graduates in visual and performing arts. Accounting is only slightly below the entire discipline of communications and communications technologies. We had nearly double the number of graduates as the 24,404 graduates in computer and information sciences. However, I suspect our market share is shrinking in the 1996-1999 years vis-à-vis computer and information sciences. High salaries and signing bonuses do make a difference in the attractiveness of a computer science degree.

The USDE table where I got this data also contains masters and doctoral degrees statistics. There are only 54 doctoral degrees in accounting (35 men and 19 women) in 1994/95.  I am suspicious of that data.  Hasselback (Page -2 in the 1998.99 Edition) reports 163 accounting doctorates for 1995.  Hasselback tracks accounting doctorates by name regarding where they graduate and where they work after graduation.    Hasselback's online Accounting Faculty Directory is at http://rarc.rutgers.edu/raw/Hasselback . You may have to go to the free hard copy version (ISBN 0-13-613696-6) for doctoral enrollment data (I cannot find that table in the online database).  In this one instance, the USDE statistic of 54 accounting doctorates in 1994/95 is way off the mark of the 163 doctorates reported by Jim Hasselback.

After I sent the above data out on the aecm listserv, I received a message from Frimette:

As an aside, did you know, that at NYU there appears to be a larger number of CPAs in the doctoral program in business education (School of Education) than in the doctoral program in accounting (Stern School of Business)?
Frimette Kass-Shraibman, CPA, Director
Foundation for Accounting Education - NYSSCPAs
530 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10036

It may be that the USDE is missing some data because business or accounting majors earn their degrees from colleges outside the college of business.  There also is a problem of dual majors, etc. when undergraduate data are collected.  It also may be that the USDE does not correct its data tables to fine tune them for accuracy as time goes by. 


Hi Will,
I haven't found any free financial ratio calculation software available with the level of sophistication that you need, but there are some financial calculators on the web. See
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm#080512Calculators

For heavy duty stuff, you should go to commercial web sites. One that advertises what you are looking for is at http://www.infotivity.com/dm_adv00.htm#financial

You might also want to take a look at http://dir.yahoo.com/Business_and_Economy/Companies/Financial_Services/Software

Many accounting software packages will compute these ratios. Links to some of these packages and campuses who use these packages in courses can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/survey1.htm#Commercial

Perhaps some of my friends on the aecm listserv will help us out with respect to free software and good web sites.


NACRA: North American Case Research Association
http://www.nacra.net/


Thank you Richard Campbell
For those of you who want to see Java alternatives to MS Excel - check out the demos on this site. http://www.tidestone.com/fopro/ssheets.htm


Announcing the newest release of Microsoft’s Web browser, Internet Explorer 5.0-with new features. http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/ms/preferredpc.htm


OFFICE 2000 GUIDE NOW ONLINE
Microsoft Office 2000’s individual components (Word 2000, Excel 2000, Access 2000, FrontPage 2000, PhotoDraw 2000, and more)
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/ms/office2000guide.htm


"Sticky Apps" for making people stick to your web site
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/columns/0,4351,391660,00.html


Harvard Business School Publishing (includes cases)
http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu/home.html

In Canada you can find HBS cases at http://www.ivey.uwo.ca/cases/

In the U.K. you can find HBS cases at http://www.ecch.cranfield.ac.uk/

No web site is given for Australia, but you can send an email message to m.larosa@mbs.unimelb.edu.au


What faculty members will be put out to pasture? (Thank you David Fordham).  What David forgot to add is that the most likely professors to be put out to pasture are those that spend too much time chatting on listservs rather than taking a look out at the real world.
http://cob.jmu.edu/fordhadr/keepup.htm


Environmental Education on the Internet
http://eelink.net

SocialFunds.com
http://www.socialfunds.com/

Survivors of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill - 10 years later...
http://www.exxonvaldez.org/

Meltdown at Three Mile Island
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/amex/three/

European Environmental Law Homepage
http://www.eel.nl/


If you keep hearing about XML and don't know what it is see
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#HTML1


A Shockwave tour of the Tower of London (the next best thing to being there.)
http://www.tower-of-london.com


Community College Web (U.S. and Canada)
http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/cc/


Net University (Argentina)
http://www.net-university.com.ar/


NewsWatch
http://www.newswatch.org/



TEMPLATE SECURITY PATCH FOR WORD 97 (from Microsoft)
This patch addresses a vulnerability that would allow malicious code to be run in a Word 97 document without warning you. Word 97 will warn you when opening a document that contains macros. However, if that document does not contain macros, but is linked to a template that does contain macros, no warning is issued. A hacker could exploit this vulnerability by causing malevolent code to be run without warning when you visit a web site or open an e-mail. This code could be used to damage or retrieve data on your system.

To download this patch and others for free*, go to:
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/ms/preferredpatch.htm


Ernst & Young launches eCommerce RapidStart service
The new product is designed to help your company design and launch web-based initiatives in less than 30 days.
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9903054/1014084/


Computer tips, news, and gossip
http://www.tipworld.com/
I especially like the section on "the most popular and widely read tips."


From Bobby Carmichael
Has anyone used the EMBANET software and web site for distance education?  I believe that Colorado State has used it very successfully for an MBA online with over 500 students nationwide. This seems to be the equivalent to WebCT and the others several have mentioned? Their URL is www.embanet.com.

Our University is currently planning to use them next year to put more of our MBA online.
http://www.embanet.com/
Bobby J. Carmichael, Professor
Department of Accounting
Texas A&M University-Commerce
Commerce, TX 75429-3011
Phone: (903)886-5658  FAX: (903)886-5663
Web: www.tamu-commerce.edu/cobt/accounting/bjc


Educational Alternatives for an At Risk Youth
http://st6.yahoo.com/pursestrings2/aledguid.html


Gigabuys.com - Dell’s "online superstore"
http://www.gigabuys.com/

Intel Pentium III Processor Showroom
http://www.intel.com/home/pentiumiii/


The New Homemaker (a very helping web site)
http://www.newhomemaker.com/


Search for Giant Squid (Smithsonian Institution on an expedition)
http://partners.si.edu/squid/


An amazing panorama (literally) of Civil War battlefields --- A must see for those of you who still view learning technologies with suspicion.  Please drag your mouse inside the pictures and watch them move about.  This brings history to life.  I wish the subject matter of accounting made good pictures.  It doesn't even make good reading.  But our books on the cost of that war have some staggering totals.
http://www.JATRUCK.COM/stonewall/


Guide to Ireland (boy would I like to go there someday)
http://www.askireland.com/


Cafe des Poetes (poetry)
http://members.tripod.com/Megan_Thomas


Some Excel shortcut keys that Bob Jensen usually forgets to use
Insert the AutoSum formula    ALT+= (EQUAL SIGN)
Enter the date    CTRL+; (SEMICOLON)
Enter the time    CTRL+SHIFT+: (COLON)
Insert a hyperlink    CTRL+K
Complete a cell entry    ENTER
Copy the value from the cell above the active cell into the cell or the formula bar     CTRL+SHIFT+" (QUOTATION MARK)
Alternate between displaying cell values and displaying cell formulas     CTRL+` (SINGLE LEFT QUOTATION MARK)
Copy a formula from the cell above the active cell into the cell or the formula bar     CTRL+' (APOSTROPHE)
Enter a formula as an array formula    CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER
Display the Formula Palette after you type a valid function name in a formula     CTRL+A
Insert the argument names and parentheses for a function, after you type a valid function name in a formula    CTRL+SHIFT+A
Display the AutoComplete list    ALT+DOWN ARROW


FILEWORLD'S Top Ten Spreadsheet Tools

1. Spreadsheet Assistant
Don't settle for what comes in the shrink-wrap. Add more than 180 actions and functions to Excel spreadsheets; most integrate with the standard menus and dialog boxes.
http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C3828%2C00.html  

2. Excel File Conversion Wizard
Excel File Conversion Wizard helps you convert Lotus 1-2-3 and Quattro Pro files (as well as many other formats) to Excel files in batch operations rather than one at a time.
http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C3825%2C00.html  

3. Web Queries Import
Get information from a Web site and put it directly into a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. The information can come straight from a page, or you can easily customize the tool to bring you just the data you need. http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C3830%2C00.html  

4. SuperSub
This spreadsheet add-in displays a dialog box that makes it very easy to indicate superscript, subscript, bold, italic, and font size for individual characters in a cell.
http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C4495%2C00.html  

5. Cleaver
If you've got too much fat in your business, chop it out with this aptly-named software-a series of Excel files designed to run "What if?" scenarios. Tailored to help business owners streamline operations to increase profitability. http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C979%2C00.html  

6. As-Easy-As for Windows 95
A powerful spreadsheet, originally designed as a Lotus 1-2-3 clone for the DOS environment. It features math, financial, statistical, date and time, and scientific functions, as well as graphics capabilities. http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C5115%2C00.html  

7. DataLoader
This menu-driven add-in for Excel moves data from sheet to sheet based on a unique key that identifies the data to be loaded and the target row. The key can be either alphabetic, numeric, or a combination. http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C3279%2C00.html  

8. Risk Analyzer for Excel
Navigate among complex choices with this set of decision-support and risk-analysis tools for Excel. http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C3280%2C00.html  

9. VistaCalc This easy spreadsheet can calculate columns and totals like all the rest. It can also handle loan repayment calculations, depreciation, and other statistical and financial functions. http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C4884%2C00.html  

10. As-Easy-As Spreadsheet
Like Lotus 1-2-3, this program packs some sophisticated functions. Check out the linear programming, multivariate regression, 3D graphics and hundreds of math, financial, and stat functions. http://www.pcworld.com/r/shw/1%2C2087%2C2399%2C00.html  


Have you ever wanted to center a graphic in the browser window? Doing so is actually quite easy. In FrontPage Editor, just click the HTML tab and enter the following code between the <body> and </body> tags:

<table border="0" width="100%" height="100%" cellspacing="0"
cellpadding="0">
<tr>

<td valign="middle" align="center">
<img border="0" height="355" width="616"
lowsrc="images/loading.gif" src="images/welcome.gif"

alt="Welcome">
</td>

</tr>
</table>

Of course, you’ll need to enter the correct image names and height and width values.
From—Martin Suchym [suchy@fastenal.com] (in ZD Tips)



Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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March 5, 1999


Congratulations to my friend Irv Gleim whose face appears on the cover of the January/February 1999 issue of New Accountant.  The "Who is Dr. Irvin Gleim?" article begins on Page 18.  The Gleim Publications. Inc. web site is at
http://www.gleim.com/


My featured accounting educator this week is John Woodroof at high-tech Middle Tennessee State University
http://woodroof.mtsu.edu/

There is a new article by him about how to import web data into Excel without having to retype the data.  The utility is called Web Query in Excel.  See "How to Link to Web Data," Journal of Accountancy, March 1999, 55-58.  The hard copy of his article is available now.  The web version will appear in about six months at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/joaiss.htm

Professor Woodroof's templates can be downloaded free from http://www.woodroof.mtsu.edu/downloads/JofA.htm
It would have been better to add the customization instructions as a separate sheet in those templates.  However, all you have to do is insert the stock symbols and the number of shares held for each security on the trading stock spreadsheet.  The more detailed instructions given on pp. 57-58 of the JA article read as follows:

If you want to build this template from scratch, follow these steps:

  • Create an Excel file with two sheets.  Label one Trading Stock and the other Web Query.  On the Trading Stock sheet, format the columns as indicated in exhibit 1 and add the symbols for the stocks or mutual funds you want to monitor.  Under the Market column, copy this formula: =Web-Query!B5*C5.  Now copy this formula into as many cells as there are stock or mutual fund symbols that you want to track.
  • On the Web Query sheet, place your cursor in cell A1.  Click on the Data button on the toolbar and click again on Get External Data.  Then click on Run Web Query.   A menu of sample Web queries is displayed, as shown in exhibit 2, page 56.   Select the query you want (for this application, select Multiple Stock Quotes by PC Quote, Inc.iqy).
  • Click on Get Data, which displays the screen Returning External Data to Microsoft Excel, as shown in exhibit 3, page 56.  By default, the results of the Web Query will be placed in a range whose upper left corner is A1.
  • Click on Properties.  The dialog box shown in exhibit 4, at left, will appear.   Set the properties exactly as shown in the exhibit and click on OK, being especially sure that the box "Refresh data on file open" is checked.
  • Click on Parameters (see exhibit 3).  The dialog box shown in exhibit 5, at right, will appear.  Choose "Get the value from the following cell" and click on the square icon at the right of the text box.  Now click on the Trading Stock page and highlight the range where the stock symbols are placed (see exhibit 1).  Press ENTER and then click OK.  The Returning External Data to Microsoft Excel dialog box (exhibit 3) reappears.  Click on OK.

Current stock prices for the companies in the stock symbol column are automatically pulled in, as shown in exhibit 6, at right.  The updated Trading Stock page will look similar to exhibit 7, below.

Now save the spreadsheet template.  As it is saved, the query is automatically embedded into the file.  The next time you wish to generate the investment report to comply with FASB Statement no.115, just open the spreadsheet.  Web Query will command the computer to go out to the Internet, download the data and then generate the report as shown in exhibit 7.

It can't get much easier--a dynamic link between a simple spreadsheet and a live Internet data source.

I found some step-by-step tutorials for the Excel web queries helpful in the Chapter 26 sections at http://www.hkkk.fi/~iss/37C015/luentomatsku/luento6/ch26/

The following example from the Australian Accountant in February 1998 describes the more general idea:

Accounting Advances
In general, accounting software is currently undergoing evolution rather than revolution. Enhancements to look forward to include better integration with spreadsheets and databases, and improved graphical user interfaces (i.e. mouse and menu operation).

One new software product designed to make life easier for financial specialists is Aptos from Walker Interactive Systems, which allows Microsoft Excel '95 or '97 users to perform complex queries and produce ad hoc reports. Since users interface with the Aptos financial data directly through Excel, they can query their data and deliver the information directly into an Excel spreadsheet, dispensing with the need for complex training or specialized financial product knowledge. Sybiz has also added enhancements to its leading Vision Windows-based accounting software which should make keeping accounts less difficult. The latest version (Version 2) includes the ability to handle foreign bank accounts (ideal for business who are planning to venture onto the Internet) and makes it possible to extract revenue and profitability information for each individual product in the company's inventory. Anticipating the growth in e-commerce, Vision allows the email addresses of suppliers and customers to be stored and the ability to electronic process payments via electronic funds transfer, thus providing the basis for automated communication and order processing via the Internet.

Other enhancements include the ability to print transaction logs without having to log off the other users, the ability to process 'kit' sales (ideal for the computer and furniture industries), individual job costing, faster bank reconciliation and order processing, improvements in stock control and inventory and the ability to consolidate multiple orders into a single invoice. Vision also includes a new sales calculator which provides the total sales to date and can export this information to an Excel spreadsheet for further analysis.          http://www.cpaonline.com.au/html/aa/9802/pg_aa9802_softwarefo.html


Three leading accounting educators who are willing to share online course materials in the American Accounting Association's Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) program at
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm

Instructor: Ronald R. Tidd
Institution: Michigan Technological University
Course Name: Accounting Principles I
Textbook: Financial & Managerial Accounting by Warren, Reeve, Fess
Note the use of accounting crossword puzzles

Instructor: Robert Czernkowski
Institution: University of New South Wales (Sydney, Australia)
Course Name: Accounting and Financial Management 1A
Textbook: Financial Accounting: An Integrated Approach  by Ken Trotman and Mike Gibbins
The following resources will be available shortly according to Dr. Czernkowski (remember that Australia's summer coincides with the U.S. winter):    Subject Outline, Teaching Staff,  Lecture and Tutorial Timetable,  Staff Consultation Timetable,   Lecture Material,  Notices & Announcements,  The PASS Program, AFM1A Tutorial Preparation Solutions,  AFM1A Interactive web tutorial exercises
Student Discussion Forums and Student Resources

Instructor: E. Barry Rice
Institution: Loyola College in Maryland
Course Name: Introductory Accounting I and II
Textbook: Accounting - A Business Perspective by Hermanson, Edwards & Maher
Note the randomized process of putting students on the spot by asking them questions and flashing their pictures on the screen.  Barry is an enthusiast of scavenger hunts that send students looking for information relevant to accounting.  Shared materials are available.  Note that Barry has won the all-university teaching award at Loyola.


For WebCT enthusiasts Amy Dunbar, Judy Welch, Wayne Ingalls, Prentice-Hall, and many others --- News from Microsoft
WEBCT® + WINDOWS® NT/IIS - A CLEAR WINNER FOR STUDENTS AT PENN STATE
This contributed article by Karen Peters of Penn State examines the benefits to both faculty and students of delivering course content online. Learn how Penn State is using WebCT running on Windows NT and Internet Information Server to develop and implement a large-enrollment online course in the arts.
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/articles/aisfeb99.htm

For information on WebCT and other shells, see
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245soft1.htm


Also from Microsoft
WHITE PAPER: EXTENDING COMMUNITY COLLEGES THROUGH THE INTERNET
This contributed article by Michael Deutch of IntraLearn focuses on how the Internet provides a new training delivery system for community colleges to help educate the workforce. It delves into extending the reach of asynchronous learning via the Internet and IntraLearn’s BackOffice base solution.
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/online/extendcc.htm

INTRALEARN - COMPLETE LEARNING MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
IntraLearn, a new Microsoft Certified Solution Provider, delivers a complete learning management system for online learning that enables educators to quickly offer highly interactive Internet course delivery.
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/online/intralrn.htm

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT
The Community College Page this month focuses on curriculum development. See the resources and links that have been collected to get you started.
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/ccpage.htm


What's next for Microsoft?
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9903012/1014024/


The Concordances of Great Books
http://www.concordance.com/


Thank you Neal Hannon
Security author Winn Schwartau has assembled a net security site, located at http://www.infowar.com/ that is simply the most
comprehensive, information rich site on the net. Between 5 and 25 new articles are posted each day dealing with topics like encryption, computer viruses, the Y2K problem, and a strong international focus. 
http://www.infowar.com


At last I have found something to replace Dick Bartels (actually we cannot replace his funny stories)
The Video Encyclopedia of Physics Demonstrations
http://www.physicsdemos.com/


"Ten Top Technologies:  The Applications".  Journal of Accountancy, March 1999, 12-13.


Mark’s CPA Review (Live in California)
http://www.markscpareview.net/


Intellectual Property Happenings (From Inforbits)
Federal Relations and Information Policy Program"
http://www.arl.org/info/index.html

"Copyright and Intellectual Property"
http://www.arl.org/info/frn/copy/copytoc.html

"Intellectual Property: Database Protection and Access to Information," by William Gardner and Joseph Rosenbaum. SCIENCE MAGAZINE, vol. 281, no. 5378, August 7, 1998, pp. 786-87.
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/281/5378/786

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998: U.S. Copyright Office Summary http://www.loc.gov/copyright/legislation/dmca.pdf [Requires free Adobe Acrobat Reader available at http://www.adobe.com/supportservice/custsupport/download.html]

Links on the Digital Future Coalition Website
http://www.dfc.org/


Access America (for senior citizens)
http://www.seniors.gov/


The Feminist Press
http://www.feministpress.org/


tutorials.com  (over 150 online tutorials)
http://www.tutorials.com/


Advanceland Online Learning Center (includes audio instruction)
http://www.advanceland.com/learndeptmain.htm


Digital Toolbox helpers from the University of Colorado
The digital toolbox is at
http://coloradodigital.coalliance.org/toolbox.html

For more information on the Colorado Digitization Project, see
http://coloradodigital.coalliance.org/


Free classroom tools from Microsoft
The Online Learning Resource Kit CD highlights some helpful tools that have been developed for Microsoft. They are now also available for download from our site. There is a Seminar Online Tool, a Gradebook Assistant and a Course Mapper.
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/online/tools.htm


Software called Compose claimed years ago to be able to edit Adobe Acrobat PDF documents.  You can read about Version 4.0 at http://www.ambia.com/compose .  You can now download the software on a trial basis from http://www.ambia.com/compose.register.htm

I have never used this software and make no claims about it.  It is intended for PDF power users.  Be somewhat cautious with respect to how well Compose will work with the forthcoming Version 4.0 of Adobe Acrobat.  There may be a time lag before Compose can handle the new version of Acrobat.


U.S. Education Journal: Guide for non-U.S. Students
http://www.usjournal.com


Learning English Adult Program, Inc. (free for adults)
http://www.weleap4esl.org/


Witzzle Pro -- A Math Game for Individuals or networked Teams
http://www.kaidy.com/BookMark%20Solution.htm


Game information and reviews
http://www.happypenguin.org/news


Classical Music (Information and Reviews)
http://inkpot.com/classical/


Favorite Poem Project
http://www.favoritepoem.org/


Professional Communications Series at the University of California Santa Cruz Extension
http://www.ucsc-extension.edu/communications/comm_series.html


Islam21
http://islam21.org


American Campus Communities (private sector assistance with financing and living)
http://www.studenthousing.com


Aggie-style student luxury --- No Joke
http://www.callawayhouse.com


Would you like to live longer (Maybe forever)?
See the MIME "Death Be Not in My Face" for lots of links (some weird and some for real)
http://memex.org/welcome.html


Something a little more realistic for prolonging life. 
Prescription drugs over the Internet
http://www.drugstore.com/


Homeschool Specialists
http://www.homeschoolspecialists.com

Also see  The Learning Center
http://www.tlc-learningcenter.com


Pregnancy & Childbirth Tips
http://www.pregnancytips.com


Thank you for the link Richard.
To learn more about the nearly-false phone scam stuff, visit the Computer Virus Myths homepage, scroll down to the "Newest non-virus stuff" section and click on the 9-0-# Phone Scam entry. It says there is no danger to a home phone (and gives more information than you may want to know about the whole business!) The web site address is www.kumite.com/myths and, while you’re at it, bookmark the site. It’s a good resource for checking out the veracity of those recurring warnings about computer viruses.

Richard Reams, Ph.D.
Staff Psychologist
Counseling & Career Services
Trinity University
715 Stadium Dr. #78
San Antonio, TX 78212-7200


Hi Glenn,

Here is my response to your query.

AutoFormat Hyperlinks

Suppose you paste a series of text hyperlinks into MS Word where each is separated by a space or a line break. Select all the hyperlinks simultaneously. Then choose the menu options (Format, AutoFormat, AutoFormat now).

If there is only one hyperlink pasted, you can avoid taking time with the above AutoFormat option. Simply backspace up to the last character in the pasted URL. and subsequently press the spacebar. The link should light up in blue.  If not, eliminate the last character of the URL if that character is a forward slash (/).

AutoFormat Line Breaks

Now I'll add some advice that you did not ask for in your message. If you are pasting web text into Frontpage and want to get rid of unwanted line breaks, try the Paste Special command instead of Paste. Then choose the 'Normal Paragraphs" option. You can also paste it from FrontPage into MS Word without the line breaks.

However, if you really want the pasted text in a MS Word doc file and do not give a hoot about creating an htm file in FrontPage, you can paste the web text in your MS Word doc file. If the pasted text has unwanted line breaks, select this text and choose the menu options (Format, AutoFormat, AutoFormat now). That should remove most unwanted line breaks as well as liven up the hyperlinks.

Lastly, I advise FrontPage or some other HTML editor for creation of htm files. MS Word is not where it is at for creation of htm files, especially when you are dealing with tables and other finer features of HTML.



Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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February 26, 1999


Large accounting firms have announced enormous educational fringe benefits.

At the American Taxation Association meetings in San Francisco last week, Doug Izard from KPMG announced that KPMG will pay for employees to get a Master of Taxation degree at any university having a qualified program.   It is not yet clear whether this only applies to newly hired graduates or to all employees in the tax division.  I searched for an announcement at the KPMG web site, but I could not find any information on this new fringe benefit.  If any of you find out some details, please let me know.  For example, will KPMG pay for room, board, and travel in addition to salary while the employee is enrolled in the masters degree program?  Also what terms must the employee agree to when accepting this fringe benefit?  For example, will the employee have to stay with KPMG for a number of years to avoid having to pay back part or all of the fringe benefit?

I previously announced the funded MBA program for PriceWaterhouse Coopers (PWC) employees and the funded Masters of Accounting programs of Ernst & Young (E&Y).   Unlike the KPMG program, PWC and E&Y employees are restricted to selected universities that designed special programs just for employees of those firms.  The PWC program is an online asynchronous curriculum.  The E&Y programs have a custom calendar that entails about seven months in residence and five months of online courses in s synchronous mode of delivery.

I have updated some information on the PWC and E&Y programs at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm#ErnstandYoung
In particular I made some heavy revisions to my comments on the E&Y program.


The above PWC and E&Y programs illustrate one type of business partnering by universities.  In this type of partnering, the universities design special programs to deliver to employees of the business firms.  Another type of partnering is where the business firms deliver courses for the university degree programs.   An example of this type of partnering is the AT&T partnering with Western Governors University that was announced in two magazines that I track regularly.  For example, see

"AT&T Learning Network Hosts WGU Content," T.H.E. Journal, February 1999, 14-16.

Another example is 3COM's educational partnership with the M.S. In Information Technology online degree program at UNC Greensboro reported in  T.H.E. Journal, February 1999, Page 11.
http://education.3com.com/


In the AAA's Accounting Education News, 1999 Winter Issue, Tracey reprinted a paper by Andre Odlyzko, Head of Mathematics and Cryptography Research at AT&T Laboratories.  The title of the paper is "Tragic Loss or Good Riddance?  The Impending Demise of Traditional Scholarly Journals."  The online version of the paper is at
http://www-mathdoc.ujf-grenoble.fr/textes/Odlyzko/amo94/amo94.html

An earlier version of the paper is at
http://h-net2.msu.edu/~mmedia/archives/logs/may96/0020.html

A closely related paper is at
http://hibiscus.ucdavis.edu/oecweb/11-97_Agenda/hart7n5.htm


It is tax season.  A few of the leading tax web sites are noted below.  The IRS web site is probably the best managed web site of all governmental agencies.   Start with the IRS and then proceed to other heavy duty alternatives discussed by Barbara Karlin at the ATA meetings last week.

http://www.irs.ustreas.gov/

http://www.taxsites.com/

http://www.taxresources.com/

http://www.abanet.org/tax/sites.html

http://www.willyancey.com/


Will Yancey lists a bunch of tax professor web sites at
http://www.willyancey.com/tax_faculty.htm

Since I do not teach taxation, I hesitate to pick out the leading educator web sites in this area.  I will, however, mention the links to three of my friends who teach taxation.

Amy Dunbar at http://www.sba.uconn.edu/users/ADunbar/dunbaru.htm

Tom Omer at http://omer.actg.uic.edu/

Mark Wolfson at http://gobi.stanford.edu/facultybios/bio.asp?ID=168


A Must See
I stumbled upon Peggy's Bookmarks.  I do not know Peggy, but I think I love her judging from
http://www.teleport.com/~hadid/bookmark_page.html


Helpers from the University of Washington for Educators Wanting to Create and/or Improve Web Sites:

Catalyst
http://depts.washington.edu/catalyst/home.html


The Web is Alive With the Sound of MP3," Newsweek, February 22, 1999, Page 16.

http://www.MP3.com (hours of free downloads, including the New York Times MP3s.)

http://www.audiogalaxy.com (lots of samples and free downloads.)

Go to the Frequently Asked Questions at http://www.MP3.comMP3 is a file format which stores audio files on a computer in such a way that the file size is relatively small, but the song sounds near perfect. You can identify MP3 files because they will end in MP3. Typically 1 MB is equal to one minute of music or several minutes for spoken work/audiobooks.  This is about a 90% reduction in hard drive space and bandwidth vis-a-vis uncompressed high quality wav files, but the actual savings depends upon the recording quality of your wav files.  If you think about a CD-ROM holding 650 Mb, this translates to over 11 hours of high quality audio in MP3 format.  More importantly, MP3 audio does not require as much Internet bandwidth as previous audio alternatives.

For a more complete discussion of audio and web streaming see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosf.htm#Audio1


Some Links Provided by Dan Gode
The Future and Darker Sides of Distance Education
http://www.westga.edu/~distance/turoff11.html
http://eies.njit.edu/~turoff
http://eies.njit.edu/~hiltz

Also see http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm


The Future and Darker Sides of Starting a Web Business
Net Slaves
http://www.disobey.com/netslaves/


An Introductory Reading List in Social and Environmental Accounting
http://www.dundee.ac.uk/accountancy/csear/reading.htm

The Centre for Social and Environmental Accounting Research (UK) provides this bibliography to help readers "get started" on social and environmental accounting teaching and research. A number of recommended bibliographies are listed, but the majority of citations fall under categories of social accounting and reporting, environmentalism, "new economics," environmental management, and basic accounting theory.   From the Scout Report.


"New York State's First Internet2 Point of Presence Established," Syllabus, February  1999, Page 10.
http://nysernet.org

Internet2 will pave the dirt roads of the present Internet.


EdGateway - online communities for educators.
http://www.edgateway.net/


An online ethics course
http://krypton.mankato.msus.edu/~yezzi/bestart.html


A "window spoofing" bug, that tricks Web surfers into thinking they are on a trusted site, has been discovered in Netscape’s browser.
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9902191/1013941/


From Neal Hannon's Internet Essentials Newsletter
Teamnet is a list for anyone who deals with or wants to know more about teams and teamwork. Teamwork is one of those subjects what most people assume to know a lot about but, in actual practice, can't seem to either get a team to really work or have had a few bad experiences on teams. Teamnet is the place to ask questions and get informed answers from trained professionals about improving your team's performance.

Subscribe to Teamnet: To subscribe this list, address a message to: majordomo@mail.cas.unt.edu with ONLY the words
"subscribe teamnet-L" or, for digest users, "subscribe teamnet-L-digest" (without the quotes) in the BODY of your message. Or write to Eric Simpson, teamnet@mail.cas.unt.edu


Computer Industry Forecasts (Search for Products)
http://www.cif1.com/free/data/search_free.htm


Forthcoming Adobe Acrobat Version 4
http://www.internetworld.com/print/1999/02/15/news/19990215-update.html

A new Web Capture tool lets users store Web pages as PDF files with graphics, frames, and formatting intact. It also stores hyperlinked pages in the PDF file as many as 999 levels down. 

The new version of PDF lets users store more data about the structure of documents, so they can extract objects, such as text graphics, from a PDF document.   (Question from Jensen:  Can you revise the basic document and still save the hyperlinks and bookmarks without having to reset every one of them when you create a revised PDF file?  For example, if your document had a Table of Contents, can you save all the internal bookmarks used for links in that Table of Contents after you revise the document in some small way?  My guess is no, and until salvaging of internal bookmarks and external web links becomes feasible, Adobe Acrobat is not an efficient authoring tool for your documents that have lots of internal bookmarks and external web links.)

Gartner Group analyst Rita Knox said version 4.0 is a significant step forward. "This is a major rethink about what the product is," she said. 

Knox said Acrobat 4.0's new features for preserving document structure address a major weakness of PDF and will help keep it relevant as structure-rich formats like XML gain ground.

The office-oriented features may convince many corporate users to switch from the free Acrobat Reader to the full version of the product, she said.

Adobe Acrobat 4 will be available within 30 to 60 days for the Windows and Macintosh platforms. The Macintosh version will lack the full digital-signature and Web-capture capabilities. Estimated street price is $249.


From Microsoft

Tools for Teachers
http://www.microsoft.com/education/k12/classroom/free.htm

Technology is a Fountain of Youth for Some Seniors
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/1999/02-12seniors.htm

TechNet Tricks and Traps
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/tips/default.htm


Thanks Bob
This come across my computer today. Perhaps you will find it interesting.

http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2212765,00.html

This URL has an article about cheating with technology. Some of it is really high tech. It also has a large number of links to cheating stories on the WEB.

Robert V. Blystone, Ph.D. rblyston@trinity.edu
Department of Biology
Trinity University
715 Stadium Drive
San Antonio, Texas 78212
210.736-7243 FAX 210/736-7229


The Garden of Claude Monet.
http://www.mmfa.qc.ca/visite-vr/anglais/index.html


WebMD Health & Wellness Center
http://shn.webmd.com/


Close to Home Humor
http://www.closetohome.com/


From the Scout Report
New Media Encyclopedia [RealPlayer, QuickTime] http://www.newmedia-arts.org/

This online reference work is a scholarly research tool for the study of new media and related artistic practices. The New Media Encyclopedia, now in the first of two phases, consists of four primary sections: Glossary, Chronological Landmarks, General Bibliography, and Artists & Works. The Artists & Works section is the core of the site, containing brief biographies of new media artists and critical descriptions of their works, which users may view with a RealPlayer or QuickTime plug-in. The section currently covers 43 artists and 233 of their works. By the end of the project’s second phase, scheduled for late 1999, it will include over 100 artists and 500 works garnered from the collections of the project’s three collaborators: the Centre Georges Pompidou, the Museum Ludwig, and the Centre pour l’Image Contemporaine. Users should note that since the project is still in its initial phase, some portions of the encyclopedia may be under development.


One of the most common complaints by FrontPage users centers around formatting problems when text is pasted into a document. I thought it would be useful to forward the following from ZD Tips:

 Renato Navajas (renaton@mict.gov.br) and Chris Barker (cbarker@microsoft.com) both recommended using the Paste Special command—instead of the Paste command—on FrontPage Editor’s Edit menu. When you do so, the Convert Text dialog box appears. Select either the Normal Paragraphs or Normal Paragraphs With Line Breaks option and click OK.

Chris Maher (chris@1x.com, http://1x.com/advisor/), on the other hand, recommends switching to HTML view, and then choosing Paste from the Edit menu. Doing so will paste your text without formatting. Be aware that this method removes carriage returns, as well, so it may not be appropriate for long selections.


From ZD Internet Search Advantage
One of the most effective ways to search the Internet is to use a search agent or robot that queries multiple search engines. These robots usually act as Metasearch engines on one particular subject, for example, searching for email addresses or ftp files. Copernic 98 plus is a Metasearch agent that gives you access to more than 130 Internet search engines and directories. You access these search engines in channels or groups that are organized by the subject area of the Internet which they cover. When you conduct a search you select one of the 19 channel sets and simultaneously access the related search engines. For example, the default search engines for the Web channel are AltaVista, AOL NetFind, Excite, Goto.com, HotBot, Infoseek, LookSmart, Lycos, Magellan, WebCrawler, and Yahoo!. Copernic includes channels for the Web, newsgroups, emails, books, business, finance, games, jobs, kids, learning, life, movies, music, news, news archives, software, sports, technology and travel.

Copernic also provides a variety of features that give it a flexibility you don’t usually find in search agents. Some of Copernic’s features include Boolean operators, relevancy ranking, search history, search wizard, offline browsing, search reports, Internet Explorer integration, and online upgrades. Copernic is available for Windows 95, 98, or NT4.x.

You can download Copernic at:
http://www.copernic.com


If you copy a lot of text from other sites or other applications and frequently paste into a FrontPage Editor document, sometimes you’ll get a mixture of font styles and size. While you’ll often want to preserve these styles, sometimes you’ll want to bring in just the unformatted text.

An easy and fast way to do so is to first paste the text into a new Notepad document and then cut and paste it into FrontPage editor.  From ZD tips.

Added Comment from Jensen:  I usually paste the document into MS Word, select all the text, and then click on (Format, Autoformat).   That improves some things, particularly many of the unwanted line breaks


A ZD MS Access Tip
In databases that track billing and payment transactions, you’ll often want to display the number of days an invoice or other item is outstanding. To generate this value in its basic form, subtract the invoice’s creation date from the current date. So, on a form or report, you could enter the following expression in a textbox’s Control Source:

ÚteDiff("y",[DateCreated],Date())

This expression subtracts the current date from the invoice’s creation date and returns the result as the number of elapsed days. By itself, however, this expression continues to generate the days-outstanding value even when the invoice is paid or completed. To prevent this, use the following modification:

=Nz(DateDiff("y",[DateCreated],[DatePaidInFull]),DateDiff("y", [DateCreated],Date()))

This expression first subtracts the date in [DatePaidInFull] from [DateCreated]. If [DatePaidInFull] is null, however, then this expression also returns a null value. As a result, Access evaluates the second expression in the Nz() function and subtracts the current date from the invoice’s creation date


Thank you Barry for the AECM:
The following is a message from Barry:
This month marks two important professional anniversaries for me.

1 - AECM is 5-years old this month. Thank you for your continued support.  (Bravo Barry)

2 - I have now been using my cable modem at home for two years. As I have stated here many times before, a cable modem will change the way you work. If it is available in your area you don’t have one, I strongly recommend that you get one ASAP. If it is not, I suggest you move to where it is! The best news regarding my cable modem in the past few months is that my dean is now reimbursing all Loyola College business faculty for the monthly cost. He won’t do that for AOL. Wonder why?

Barry Rice



Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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February 16, 1999

Controversial free masters programs from Ernst&Young and PriceWaterhouse Coopers
The file contains a message from Tom Freka at the University of Notre Dame that adds more details and argues against some of  my original concerns about the E&Y programs.
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm#ErnstandYoung


From Tracey
Seeking Successful Examples from Accounting Classrooms for a Teaching with Technology Toolkit

Request for your successful examples

Submission deadline (for ONE PAGE description): March 10, 1999

Do you successfully use technology in teaching accounting? Would you like your innovation to be included in a prestigious free CD-ROM/Web toolkit to be distributed to faculty worldwide?

The American Accounting Association (AAA) and American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) are developing a CD-Toolkit to provide accounting faculty with useful examples and supportive materials for incorporating technology into their courses. If you have successfully used technology to enhance your students’ educational experience, you can help others do the same! Your experience can become part of the CD-Toolkit that will be distributed to faculty interested in enhancing their courses by using technology to accomplish their learning objectives.

We are looking for examples that span a wide range of content areas and technological applications, as well as a range of complexity from simple applications to those that are more complex. If you have or know of successful applications of technology in teaching accounting, please fill out and submit the simple one-page form at the bottom of this e-mail message. If you prefer, you can find this form on-line at:

http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/newsarc/toolkit.htm

Regards,
Tracey Sutherland at
AAATracey@packet.net
Director of Faculty Development
American Accounting Association
phone: (941) 921-7747 ext. 311, fax: (941) 923-4093


Southwestern Publshing Company's Forum for the Academic Accounting Community
http://www.swcollege.com/acct/forums/conf.html


Three featured accounting educator web sites.

If you had a link to Julie Smith David's web site, you should probably change it to the new link shown below.  Julie has some great helpers, including download presentations of her lectures in AIS.
http://www.cob.asu.edu/faculty/jsdavid/

David Spiceland at the University of Memphis has always had a helpful web site
http://www.people.memphis.edu/~dspice/
When a password is required, David usually shares this password with accounting educators.

Amy Dunbar has just moved to the University of Connecticut. Her new web site is at
http://www.sba.uconn.edu/users/ADunbar/TAXHOME.htm  
She provides the following information about her part of the ATA meeting in San Francisco this week:

Amy's part deals primarily with WebCT. She wrote a WebCT section of a teaching monograph to be published by the American Taxation Association next summer. The pdf file is at
http://www.sba.uconn.edu/users/adunbar/webct.pdf

Amy would appreciate your printing and bringing this overview to the technology session.

It would also be great if you could check out a couple site built using WebCT. Amy describes various WebCT tools in the pdf file, which you can see in action. For example, John Wanless uses WebCT for his financial accounting course. The site can be accessed at:
http://www.webteach.atc.fhda.edu:8900/public/ACCT1/index.html
Note that you should use a login id of guest and a password of guest.


I would like to remind you that Windows Find and Windows Explorer Find utilities are useful when searching file names.  These utilities will not, however, search the text strings inside every file.

I am now going to describe a rather amazing $80 piece of software that was featured on Computer Chronicles (PBS).  Before doing so, I must inform you that I just downloaded the software and am only familiar with a few of its various features.  The feature that I like is that I can click on Find and type a keyword such as "Dunbar".   Enfish Tracker Pro will search inside every file on my hard drives for a document or saved email message (I use Outlook for email) that contains the word Dunbar.  I get a listing (containing the surrounding phrases) of every one of my web documents that contains Amy Dunbar's name, every MS DOC  or other file that contains her name, and every stored email message that contains her name.  She can't hide anywhere in my various hard drives.  John Howland says this search feature is standard on UNIX operating systems, but it is not standard in Windows-based operating systems.

The downside is that the full version of Enfish Tracker Pro requires 100 Mb of hard drive.  It also takes slightly over one hour to initialize, but since I can let it run in background and do other things on my computer, the initialization phase does not bother me greatly. You can use it while it is initializing.   I am still trying out some of the other features such as a cross-referencing utility.  It creates an index that you can customize for frequently searched terms.  You can also customize this index, and I have already done so on my new version.

You might like to download a 45 day trial period for Enfish Tracker Pro software from either of the following web sites:
http://www.kvo-intercom.com/Enfish/download/
http://kidsurf.softseek.com/Business_and_Productivity/Information_Organizers/Review_20070_index.html

The home web site is at
http://www.enfish.com/index.html

Enfish Tracker Pro continuously monitors all your information sources simultaneously and actually reads everything for you. It locates, prioritizes, cross-references and displays your information in an organized environment where you can view it instantly (including graphics) and work with it more effectively. Plus, it alerts you to any relevant new information you may have missed.


Trinity University's Student Managed Web Fund
http://www.trinity.edu/pcooley/smf/index.htm


World’s Smallest Web Server (For ubiquitous computing from Stanford University)
http://wearables.stanford.edu/


Microsoft Office 2000 Guide.
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/ms/office2000guide.htm


WordLab
http://www.wordlab.com/
Described by Yahoo as a "thesaurus with serious attitude,"


StockMaster
http://www.stockmaster.com/


500 Mhz Notebooks
http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/stories/news/0,4153,388838,00.html


Internet Learning Materials for MBA Students
http://bized.ac.uk/fme/


I usually forget to monitor EDUCAUSE and regret it later
http://www.educause.edu/


The Harlem Renaissance (from Encyclopedia Britannica)
http://harlem.eb.com/


U.S. Freedom of Information Act Reading Room
http://foia.state.gov


Ethical Business: the Search for Research
http://nt1.ids.ac.uk/eldis/hot/ethics.htm


Current U.S. Employment Data
http://stats.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.toc.htm


College Students Online
http://www.collegestudentsonline.com

ScholarAid
http://www.scholaraid.com

BEST COLLEGES: Pro & Con Guide
http://www.dancris.com/~projim


Barnes and Noble Books and Gifts
http://www.garden-of-gifts.com/gardenofgifts/barandnob.html


Buck a Book
http://www.buck-a-book.com


Algebra You Can Use
http://www.tdi.net/kkoths


The Knowledgent Corporation
http://www.knowledgent.com/
Creating Virtual Private Universities??


Biological Sciences
http://biology-newark.rutgers.edu


Down Syndrome software - language development
http://www.es.co.nz/~geddes


Automobile and Truck Purchasing Online (Slow Loading Large File)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob.htm#AutomobilesAndTrucks


Religion Online
http://www.religion-online.org/


Educational Software
http://hem2.passagen.se/jgordon/gp/index_e.htm


Bexar County Appraisal District (Thanks Aaron)
http://www.bcad.org/property.htm


stateline.org (tracks events taking place in the 50 state capitols)
http://www.stateline.org/


English Tutoring Services
http://toefl.telecampus.com


Not a LSAT prep course—a law school prep course
http://www.lawpreview.com/


The Christian Homeschool Journal
http://members.xoom.com/hmschooljrnl/


Negotiator Pro Co.
http://viamall.com/npro
Publisher of high quality negotiation support software and role-play simulations.


The Hampster Dance
http://www.hampsterdance.com/


FunTrivia.com
http://www.funtrivia.com/


Free-PC.com
http://www.free-pc.com/


For the young and old like me
A Retirement Calculator
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/nycu/money/moretcal.htm


Good morning

While diving through all the URL’s in the reply by Robert Jensen to

Don Eland’s original message I came across some links to ‘excellent

sites for English teachers’

What I didn’t find was a link to probably the BEST English for teachers site on the web (I am biased of course)

http://english.unitecnology.ac.nz


English Online (a message from Richard Elliott at the University of Auckland)

Good morning
While diving through all the URL’s in the reply by Robert Jensen to Don Eland’s original message I came across some links to ‘excellent sites for English teachers.’   What I didn’t find was a link to probably the BEST English for teachers site on the web (I am biased of course)
http://english.unitecnology.ac.nz

Readers may wish to go to this site and peruse the excellent ( downloadable/ modifiable/ useable resources for english teaching) Also have a look at the introduction to the Internet pages...an excellent resource and one which is receiving some superb feedback!
enjoy the rest of your day

regards

Richard Elliott
Head of Learning Technologies
‘Learning in the drivers seat, technology turning the wheels!’
UNITEC Institute of Technology
Private Bag 92025
Auckland New Zealand
phone: 6498152929;Fax 6498154312
UNITEC URL: http://www.unitec.ac.nz


Welcome to the latest edition of the Internet Essentials ‘99 Newsletter for the financial professional. This newsletter is dedicated to the needs of Accounting and Finance professionals.
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html
Today’s topics include eFax, your free fax address on the Internet, New Hyper-Computer:   60,000 times faster than a 350-Mhz PC, Playstation Clone Ok’d By Judge, Bar-code for your Fridge?, Programs for Better Browsing, Free PC offer a huge hit, and  PRE-IPO...... exit23b.com and the free stock giveaway.
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html
Please visit the Web site and let me know what you think about it.

With great optimism,
Neal Hannon


A FrontPage tip from ZD tips
You’ve probably noticed that when you insert VBScript or JavaScript into a Web page, FrontPage ignores your script in Normal mode. Since the script is invisible, it’s easy to accidentally delete it.

To prevent this problem, choose Format Marks from the View menu. When you do, the location of your scripts will then be marked with a little flag. JavaScript flags have a "J" on them, while VBScript flags show a miniature version of the Visual Basic logo


An Internet Search tip from ZD tips

One of the key elements of each search result is the document’s URL. The directories that pages are placed in can often help you determine a document’s relevance. For example, if you’re looking to download a software program named "Vigrim" and you’re presented with the three URLs listed below, the choice is fairly obvious.

www.domain.com/products/vigrim.html

www.feldergarb.com/reviews/vigrim.html

www.october.com/downloads/vigrim.zip

The directory named downloads is a good clue, but the fact that the file in that directory is a .ZIP file almost ensures that you’ve found the download you want.

It’s also a good idea to look at the link URL for each individual search result URLs when you retrieve a significant number of documents from the same site. Some Webmasters are so good at submitting their site information to search engines, that their Web site’s pages show up repeatedly. However, this doesn’t necessarily mean that the site has information that’s relevant to your search. In such a case, you’ll want to use a NOT statement to exclude those sites from your results.

On the other hand, many searches will retrieve multiple hits from a site precisely because they are relevant, in which case you might have literally dozens of Web pages to sift through. For an example, go to AltaVista and do a phrase search for "library of congress." In this situation, it will probably be easier to track down the information you need at the Web site rather than through your search results. Cut (truncate) the URL back to only the Web site’s home page or a directory  related to your search. For example, if a variation on the URL www.domain.com/products/document.html appears multiple times in a search results, you might want to cut the URL back to www.domain.com/ or to the products directory.

When you do click through to the site, make sure to take a careful look at the navigation bar. Also, stay on the lookout for a sight map, which can give you a quick graphic representation of all the information on the site.

----------------------

If you’re doing serious research you’ll likely pull up some Web page documents that are very long. Searching through such documents just to determine their relevance to your work can be very time consuming, but you can speed up your research by using your browser’s Find dialog box. Just press Ctrl[F] and your browser will display a Find dialog box. Enter your most prominent keyword and then click the Find Next button. The dialog box will search down the Web page until it locates the keyword. You can then use Ctrl[G] or the Find Next button to move down the page and quickly assess the document’s potential usefulness.



Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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February 10, 1999

This is a MUST SEE web site.
The WWW Virtual Library from Stanford University
This has a great topical index for searches (it has economics and finance, but seems to have overlooked us accountants --- is that a loss to the world?  Perhaps we're listed under fiction writers!)
http://vlib.stanford.edu/Overview.html
The above web site transports users to other virtual libraries.  For example, the finance link transports us to the Ohio State University Virtual Finance Library.

Also see the online collections of the Universities of California.
http://www.cdlib.org/


American Taxation Association
http://www.uni.edu/ata

The 1999 ATA Midyear Meeting and JATA Conference will be held February 19th and 20th at the Hyatt at Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco.  Thank you Amy Dunbar for inviting   me to these meetings even though I suffer from "dumbentia" when it comes to tax law
http://www.uni.edu/ata/meetings.html


Dumbentia (if you like Dilbert, try this one if you can patiently endure the slow server)
http://www.dumbentia.com/


White collar crime:
Two separate KPMG surveys have found that fraud is escalating in American and Canadian companies. Sixty-five percent of US executives described company fraud as a "major problem" while in Canada, more than half of the respondents said their organisations had been defrauded in the previous year.
1998 U.S. Fraud Survey Report  http://www.us.kpmg.com/assurance/fraud/fraud.html
1998 Canadian Fraud Survey Report  http://www.kpmg.ca/isi/vl/frsur98e.htm


Featured web sites of three accounting educators who keep their web sites up to date:

I like the way Ceil Pillsbury maintains her web site with useful information for accounting educators.   This is a dynamic web site that never grows stale.
http://www.uwm.edu/~ceil/
Her Systems 408 course is a good model for others to follow at http://www.uwm.edu/~ceil/systems/opening.html
She also has one of the best accounting career helper pages at http://www.uwm.edu/~ceil/career/jobs/index.html

An accounting educator site filled with helpful bookmarks is the Will Yancey web site at
http://www.willyancey.com/

Another up to date and interesting web site for accounting and auditing is the web site of A. Faye Borthick at
http://www.gsu.edu/~accafb/borthick.htm
This is an especially good web site for issues and trends in assurance services of CPA firms.


BinaryThoughts (includes e-commerce and cross-platform issues)
http://www.binarythoughts.com/


The Autumn/Fall issue of the ECCH Echo Newsletter of the European Case Clearing House just arrived in my mailbox.  I could not find an online version of this issue.  There are several items of interest in this issue about the role of technology in case pedagogy and business education in general.  One article reviews four cases and one simulation in a multimedia CD format (see Page 20).  There is also a promise to make technology in education  issues a feature at the ECCH web site in the future.
http://www.ecch.cranfield.ac.uk/


Accounting Students Newsletter (includes links to student forums).
http://www.accountingstudents.com/


InformationWeek Daily notes the following about how insurance companies are finding a niche in information systems.  This may have an impact on CPA ventures into assurance services (not to be confused with insurance services).
IBM Joins Insurers To Offer E-Business Security___ IBM and Fidelity and Deposit Cos., a group of insurers and bond companies, disclosed details yesterday of their jointly offered E-Risk Protection Program for financial services companies. The program combines IBM’s insurance industry expertise and E-business security consulting services with Fidelity and Deposit’s insurance policies to provide coverage for a host of E-business activities and potential losses.

The program encompasses all E-business activities, from internal and external E-mail to electronic-business transactions, and includes coverage for financial losses, damage to reputation, liability for service interruption, and loss of intellectual property.

The annual premium for a minimal E-Risk policy would begin at $4,000, according to a Fidelity and Deposit spokesman. That would include a risk assessment, but none of the consulting services offered by IBM, he added


Despite bandwidth bottlenecks that could slow response times and potentially high development costs, more companies are adding rich media to their Web applications.   Universities will be certain to follow (in some instances lead).
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9902031/387407/


I have added a links to the Milken Educator Virtual Workspace at my shell document at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245soft1.htm
I will probably add some projects to this workspace next summer.  A quote from the MEVW Manual that I downloaded is shown below:

The Milken Educator Virtual Workspace (MEVW) is a Web-based collaorative technology where Milken Educators and other educators from across the world can engage in online teaching and learning activities. The MEVW is available for FREE to people who submit project applications and attain Foundation approval. The MEVW supports:

1. Multiple modes of collaboration

2. Project planning and management tools

3. Text and multimedia publishing

4. Evaluation tools that measure participants' and leaders' levels of participation and final outcome products

5. Administration features that allow project leaders to register or delete users, add additional projects, or update
         project descriptions, outcomes, and goals.

All of these features help project leaders and participants create and sustain successful teaching and learning environments.

The Milken Educator Virtual Workspace (MEVW) is available FREE to the MEVW educators, administrators, parents, and members of the general community who would like to participate in collaborative online learning experiences.


Lotus Preps Non-Notes Collaboration Tool
Code-named "Haiku," the product does not use the brand-new Lotus Notes R5 client.
http://www.internetwk.com/news0299/news020599-8.htm


Learning Connect (with special features for Lotus Learning Space developers)
http://www.learningconnect.com/


Thank you Neil Hannon for these two web site suggestions
SAP has expanded its great web site on e-commerce
http://www.sap.com/internet/index.htm

Free downloading games galore (chess, card games, crosswords, etc.)
http://www.geocities.com/features/Entertainment/clicknplay/


Oklahoma State University Distance Learning
http://distancelearning.okstate.edu


Center for Innovation in Education
http://www.center.edu/


Make Money Now (home business opportunities and learning projects for children)
http://www.magiclearning.com/cgi/members/MC20037.html

Also see  Furure World
http://www.future-world.com/24148.htm

And Magic Learning Systems!
http://www.magiclearning.com/cgi/members/oz19877.html


Pleasant Corner Bookstore (discounts from 40% to 90%)
http://www.peric.net


World’s Best Videos (an enormous selection)
http://www.totalmarketing.com/128310


Suppressed Science (Would Darwin have made it in modern science?)
http://www.karoo.net/heretical/darwin.html


America's 10 Most Wanted (words that is)
http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/fugitives/index.htm


Aviation Accident Database
http://www.tstonramp.com/~kebab/


Dead Musicians
http://elvispelvis.com/fullerup.htm


New Media Encyclopedia (avant-garde artists and filmmakers)
http://www.newmedia-arts.org/


Masters of Photography
http://masters-of-photography.com/


Funtastic Learning (for children with special skill development needs)
http://www.funtasticlearning.com


Stories, poems, and excerpts from forthcoming books by Alfred A. Knopf publishers.
http://www.randomhouse.com/knopf/borzoi/


African-American artists and art works
http://www2.blackside.com/immaw/


Bar Review and Bar Exam Preparation
http://www.thestudygroup.com/


SeniorTalk.Com (Jensen is getting closer to needing this)
http://www.seniortalk.com


Changing Seasons Software (for serious stamp collectors and those just wanting to see the pictures)
http://www.stampbase.com


A FrontPage tip from ZDtips
A common practice among Web designers is to maximize the compression of JPEG images in their preferred graphics software application and then import the images into their FrontPage Web. However, FrontPage is set up by default to further compress the inserted images by as much as 75 percent, which noticeably degrades the quality of the image after the page is saved. To prevent this overcompression, right-click on the image that you just inserted into FrontPage Editor (prior to saving the page) and select Image Properties from the context menu. Change the JPEG compression setting to 100 percent, which will prevent FrontPage from performing any unnecessary compression.



Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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February 2, 1999

The feature this week is "The Next Big Thing" (that's pronounced "Thang" in Texas.)

I begin with the Academy (Hyper) Awards of Internet Device Hardware and Software as listed in my favorite magazine called NewMedia, February 1999, pp. 28-48. The title of the article is "The Next Big Thing: Internet Devices." Many of the award winning products (such as the winning laptop computer) are not necessarily restricted to Internet applications. I provide a summary listing under the link "The Next Big Thing" at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000equip.htm

Next I add some of my own additional predictions under the link "Some Additional Next Big Things" at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000equip.htm
Actually some of my suggestions here are really just my favorites at the moment.

What I would really like is for you to send me some suggestions for some other big things. If I agree with you I would like to add it to the list (under your name).


New Media's judges chose the Macromedia Dreamweaver (as a Visual Authoring Tool on Page 35) and Macromedia Dreamweaver Attain (as an Iterative Online Training and Education Delivery System).  Poor old Asymetrix ToolBook and Librarian did not even get honorable mention by the judges.

As a visual authoring tool, I find Dreamweaver to be innovative, but it is very tedious for basic HTML in my viewpoint. I prefer the exceedingly efficient Microsoft FrontPage for the basic HTML document. Then I like to read the file in Dreamweaver in order to add behaviors, layers that hide and show, multiple level and embedded layers, and many innovations for tables. In other words, I use Dreamweaver to fancy up some of my FrontPage documents.

I have added an illustration of hiding and showing layers using Dreamweaver. It may be best to run this illustration in Internet Explorer. The illustration does not work well in my version of Netscape. My layering illustration is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/dreamtut/example1/dwex01.htm

Using Dreamweaver is a lot easier than coding JavaScript like I used to have to do for hiding and showing layers. See
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/busn2311/helpers1.htm#JavaScript

I have not used Dreamweaver Enterprise and probably will not be able to do so until I install my own server rather than rely upon the faculty server at Trinity University. Serving up two-way interactive documents requires special server configuration and software that my University is reluctant to install on the common servers. For $799, however, Dreamweaver Attain lets instructors install interactive course management systems on the web. There is also an Authorware Attain for the more sophisticated Authorware system. The Macromedia web site is at
http://www.macromedia.com


The current wealthiest man in the world, Bill Gates, is often accused of borrowing from the creativity of competitors like Apple Corporation and Netscape.  At last it is revealed that he did amass his billions with creativity --- creative accounting.   "For years, Microsoft has systematically distorted its profit from figures in an effort to consistently beat Wall Street expectations and keep its stock price steadily rising.  The false reports would violate SEC regulations and amount to outright fraud." claims Charlie Pancerzewski, the former Chief of Internal Audits at Microsoft Corporation. I want to thank Roger Debreceny for this tip. The current link that works this morning is at
http://www.seattleweekly.com/features/9901/features-romano.shtml
If that fails, use the Article Search key word Ramano or Mike Romano to search for the article "Microfraud? A Microsoft executive accuses the company of cooking its books."


I am using a new Trinity University classroom (with 30 computers) that uses the Insight System from Tech Electronics at
http://www.techelec.com .

I am very happy with this system. I cannot only see what is happening on any student’s computer, I can take over the keyboard and mouse functions of any student’s computer and/or project that students computer on the front screen of the classroom. I can project my computer onto the monitor of any or all students. I can designate groups of students and then interact with each group.

There are many other features. I suggest you take a look at this system


To contribute to the on-going discussion about classroom software that allows instructors to control/project student computers...

I’m still in search of the right answer, too. For a new computer lab we installed this fall, we looked at two hardware solutions, but couldn’t get them incorporated into the classroom design without major delays (the conduits already laid down in the concrete floors would have required some modification for the cabling). In addition, we didn’t want to have more hardware on the student desktops (these systems require some sort of box that daisy-chains all the computers together and then to a central controller). And, these systems are very expensive (@$15-20K for a 33-computer lab).

We looked at CLASSNET (made by Minicom 800-922-8020 http://www.macatawa.org/~minicom) and V-Net (made by Inline 800-882-7117 http://www.inlineinc.com) Another system, which I have not seen is COMWEB.

Our big hope is for a software solution. We examined CLASSROOMS which looks great. Unfortunately, we couldn’t get it to work properly in our NT lab (even though they said it was NT-compatible). CLASSROOMS is made my DDES in Canada and distributed by NorCal in the US—see http://www.ddes.com .

That’s my two-cents...
Melissa Carter-Goodrum mcarterg@INDIANA.EDU


A [multi-computer classroom] software solution is offered by Altiris (http://www.altiris.com). I have seen a demonstration. It has a lot of capability and is less expensive than most hardware solutions. It will run on Windows 95/98 and NT.

Rob Ingram
Culverhouse School of Accountancy
University of Alabama
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0220
mailto:ringram@cba.ua.edu
http://cbasss3.cba.ua.edu/accweb/ringram/


There is a new bill in US Congress that will be affecting all Internet Users. You might want to read this and pass it along to others. CNN stated that the Government would in two weeks time decide to allow or not allow a Charge to your (OUR) phone bill equal to a long distance call each time you access the Internet. This will be very costly for those of us who like to "surf the net" and communicate frequently via emails.

Think about that for a minute, and how it would effect each and every one of us. Please visit the following URL and fill out the necessary form to contact your Representative regarding this matter.

The URL is http://www.house.gov/writerep/


Impact of Netscape/AOL merger on the browser wars?
http://www.statmarket.com/coverstory.html


Neil Hannon has some great links this week (Issue 2.5) at
http://www.tiac.net/users/nhannon/news.html .
Included is the following Virtual Meeting Place link:
The kind folks at http://jointplanning.com have assembled a Web site dedicated to providing space for virtual meetings for groups. Features include a calendar function, discussion groups, areas to post items of interest and even a place to take a group vote. This site is free for non-commercial use.


Baker Library at the Harvard Business School
http://www.library.hbs.edu/bakerbooks/

New Books at Baker Library
http://www.library.hbs.edu/bakerbooks/recent/

New Books from HBS Press
http://www.library.hbs.edu/bakerbooks/hbsp/

Faculty Books in Print
http://www.library.hbs.edu/bakerbooks/faculty/


TeachMe Finance
http://www.teachmefinance.com/


From the Scout Report --- Bnet
http://www.bnet.co.uk/

The information management services company Fontal (UK) aims to provide "leading sources" of business management information on the Internet at Bnet. Guides, directories, and case studies on business administration, business regulations, intellectual property, innovation, manufacturing, and quality, among many other topics, are available from a searchable database. Although use of the database is subscription-based, free access is available to full- and part-time students, academics, and librarians following registration and acceptance of the Bnet User Agreement.


Bob,
My web site (soon to be updated with more Peachtree FAQs and books)
http://users.sedona.net/~cyacht

I received your attachments just fine. Great idea!
Carol Yacht, Author
College Accounting with Peachtree (Volume 1); College Accounting with Excel & Peachtree (Volume 2), Houghton Mifflin
Computer Accounting with Peachtree, Irwin/McGraw-Hill
520 634 0603 (MT)
520 634 9006 (Fax)
http://users.sedona.net/~cyacht


Commodity Market Review
http://www.fao.org/WAICENT/FAOINFO/ECONOMIC/ESC/ESCP/cmre.htm


Chat About Finance
http://chat.lycos.com


From the Scout Report: The CIOS/ McLuhan Website Project
http://www.cios.org/encyclopedia/mcluhan/index.html

Created by the Communication Institute for Online Scholarship (CIOS), the CIOS/ McLuhan Website Project aims to be a hypermedia education resource, introducing students to communication studies through the work of Canadian theorist and educator Marshall McLuhan. This informative, well-designed site exemplifies the rationale behind McLuhan’s oft-quoted aphorism: "the medium is the message." The site is comprised of four engaging sections: M, Probe, Explorations, and Collide-Oscope. M provides a brief history of McLuhan’s life and work as well as a bibliography. Probe, an interactive tutorial section, contains four modules introducing the ideas and concepts of the "Toronto School" of communication studies. Explorations offers four case studies in modern media, allowing students to apply what they learned in the Probe modules. Collide-Oscope, which is currently in development, will be an educational game, teaching students about McLuhan’s four laws of media


Microsoft's Online Learning Solutions Paper
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/admin/solution/online/


40% Off Books
http://www.lycos.com/shopnet/books/

Used Books Online
http://www.angelfire.com/ny2/usedbooks


Katy High School (Seems like quite a few Trinity students graduated from this National Blue Ribbon School called Katy)
http://www.katy.isd.tenet.edu/khs


 Journal of International Forum of Educational Technology & Society
http://zeus.gmd.de/ifets/periodical


Human Anatomy
http://www.vesalius.com


UK Computers and Texts Journal
http://info.ox.ac.uk/ctitext/publish/comtxt


The Easy Way to Learn
http://www.magiclearning.com/cgi/members/FC19285.html


So you think Mike Kearl has data? Try the Stat. Market that claims to have over 11 million visitors per day.
http://www.statmarket.com


Photographic encyclopedia of landscape plants.
http://www.floridata.com/


Sony Entertainment Robot
http://www.sony.co.jp/soj/robot/robot.html


CIOS/McLuhan Site (The Greatest of the Great)
http://www.cios.org/encyclopedia/mcluhan/index.html


Advertising in Days of Old
http://www.frankjump.com


First 9 Months (a very impressive graphics site --- impressive from the standpoint of navigation). This really accounts for what goes on in the womb.
http://www.first9months.com/


A web cam in Alaska
http://www.hhmi.org/alaska/


Recognizing and Rewarding Good Teaching in Australian Higher Education
http://services.canberra.edu.au/caut/commproject/rrgt/titlepag.html


Max's Investment World
http://www.maxinvest.com/


Encyclopaedia of the Orient
http://i-cias.com/e.o/index.htm


Western History Photographs
http://gowest.coalliance.org


Black Archives of Mid-America
http://www.blackarchives.org/


Murray Simpson's History of Idiocy
http://www.dundee.ac.uk/~mksimpso/


Churches and Church Membership
http://www.arda.tm/archive/CMS90ST.html :

http://www.arda.tm/archive/CMS90CNT.html


Electronic Privacy Information Center
http://www.epic.org/free_speech/copa/


Home Repair
http://www.tripod.com/pod_central/pods/homerepair/


PC Week Labs tests show that the new version of Linux has the horsepower to perform at the enterprise level, giving corporate IT managers more reason than ever to seriously investigate using the open-source OS in their organizations.
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9902011/387766/

Plus: Learn Linux now!
http://www.zdu.com/catalog/deptcatalog.asp?DepID=19&Sort=&CourseID=5731#5731

Jamie Lewis says Linux needs more than hype to battle
Microsoft. Read the column at
http://www.pcweek.com/b/pcwt9902015/2196965/


Windows 98: Not a lame duck after all?
Microsoft has said repeatedly that the next version of its desktop OS will be based on the NT kernel, but the company now admits it is contemplating extending its venerable Windows 9x kernel for at least one more release.
Read the story at
http://www.pcweek.com/a/pcwt9902013/1013795/



Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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January 26, 1999

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Probably the most serious problem in both the FASB's SFAS 133 and the IASC's IAS 39 is that these standards require continual adjustments of financial instruments derivatives to fair value without guidance on how to estimate fair value for custom contracts that are not traded in markets or are traded in markets too thin for valuation purposes. Over half the contracts around the world are custom forward and swap contracts that are difficult and controversial to value. I have revised my Working Paper 231 that proposes a newer approach for valuing interest rate swaps. The web link is at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/231wp/231wp.htm

I also have a tutorial Excel file called 133exb.xls that can be downloaded along with my updated tutorials at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/13300tut.htm

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My good friend Ceil Pillsbury forwarded a copy of an Arthur Andersen multimedia training package of three CD-ROMs entitled "Mastering Markets: Foreign Exchange." These are probably the most sophisticated multimedia training modules that I have ever examined. There were a few glitches (at infrequent points where videos hang up) and sometimes the navigation alternatives were confusing, but the advantages of this learning hypermedia are immense. If you get a chance to purchase or otherwise use these or other modules in the AA InterAct Learning™ Series, I think you will really be impressed. I gather that these modules are expensive to produce (the package that I reviewed cost almost as much to produce than most of us earn in a lifetime). The cost to use is also not cheap --- a one-year, one-user rental price is $1,399. But this is really good stuff, and AA cannot be expected to give it away. The web site for the module that I reviewed can be found at
http://www.arthurandersen.com/Framesalt.asp?/dtrm/interact/fx.asp

You can order a free demo CD while viewing the above web site. I recommend that you do so. Note that multiple-user discounts are available. There is a high level of multimedia quality and technical learning detail. There is also a high level of realism in the video clips.

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From Joe Straub (in his words):

John Wiley & Sons has partnered with AccountingNet to bring the trusted print versions of GAAP & GAAS to the Internet.

You may already be using these texts as references or required reading in your courses. By offering both print and Internet versions, you and your students will enjoy many advantages:

*Lower costs through special student discounts.
*Point-and-click user-friendly applications.
*No more worries about lost, damaged or stolen texts.

For the first term of 1999, AccountingNet is happy to make available our "Student Resource Kit" to colleges and universities!

OUR BEST VALUE $129, "Student Resource Kit" GAAP & GAAS, online and print versions, plus a subscription to TaxLibrary.com. and the 1999 CCH Master Tax Guide

 

1999 GAAP Print $49.95

1999 GAAS Print $49.95

1999 GAAP Online $9.95

1999 GAAS Online $9.95

1999 CCH Master Tax Guide $19.00

 To set up your school on any of these programs or if you have any questions e-mail me at joeys@accountingnet.com or call (800) 724-4696 ext. 262.

I look forward to working with you and your institution.

Sincerely,

Joe Straub
Director of University Relations
AccountingNet

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President-elect Jan R. Williams is filling AAA committee assignments for 1999-2000. If you are interested in serving on a committee or in suggesting someone to serve, please send contact information (name, affiliation, address, phone, fax and email) with any specific committees of interest to:

Jan R. Williams
Ernst & Young Professor
Associate Dean for Academic Programs
716 Stokely Management Center
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-0570
Fax: (423) 974-1766
Email: jwilli13@utk.edu

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EDI Resource Center
http://www.telistics.com/ediresourcecenterfr.htm
Technology, e-commerce, and information systems

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T.H.E. Journal beginning on Page 62 of the January 1999 issue has an interesting article entitled "Using External Collaborations to Advance Distributed Learning at the University of Pennsylvania" by Michael Eleey and Marsha Comegno. The online version is at
http://www.thejournal.com/magazine/current/feat02.html

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Dear Amazon.com customer,
Because you’ve purchased John Hagel’s previous book, "Net Gain," we thought you might like to know that his latest
book, "Net Worth" is on the shelves at Amazon.com. For the next few days, you can order this title at a savings of 40% by following the link below:

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0875848893/ref=ad_ah1

In "Net Worth," John Hagel and Marc Singer consider the future of e-commerce and the emerging role of the "infomediary." The "infomediary," according to Hagel and Singer, will give consumers increased privacy and vendors an unprecedented look at how their customers behave—but at a price. "Net Worth" is a provocative look at how the role of customers and vendors will change in the network economy.

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The Write Response
http://www.writeresponse.com.au
The Write Response is Australia’s leading education mailing list supplier

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The Course Resource
http://www.course-resource.com

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Free Word 97 Tutorial
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Park/5403/

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Written language and speech therapy
http://members.xoom.com/she123/

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Apply for your own patents
http://home.earthlink.net/~invention

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Zéro de Conduite !
http://www.zero-de-conduite.com/

French Pedagogic web site
http://www.zero-de-conduite.com/

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Abacus Learning Systems, OnLine Learning
http://www.abacus-uk.com

Abacus Virtual College
http://www.virtualcollege.co.uk

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Treasury of Children’s Classic Stories
http://www.geocities.com/heartland/lane/6410

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The Writers Symposium
|http://symp.hypermart.net

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College Party House
http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Gym/3085/index.html

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Visiting Russia with HCM Sys (For you Sarah and Bruce)
http://hcmsys.com/ru.htm

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The Poetry Corner
http://www.get-involved.com/poetry-corner/

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Berceo’s Spanish courses in Spain (For you and the other Spanish instructors Matt)
http://www.berceo.com

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Wildflowers and Wonderings
http://www.angelfire.com/de/walker

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American Truths (lots of audio)
http://www.americantruths.com

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National Computer Training
http://www.n-c-t.com

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Streaming Media World - news, tools, tutorials, links, and discussion forums.
http://www.streamingmediaworld.com/

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Mexico for Kids
http://explora.presidencia.gob.mx/index_kids.html

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Awards to ethical companies
http://www.ethicsinaction.com/

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Adolescent Adulthood - a guide to flirting, dating, and dumping.
http://www.adolescentadulthood.com/
Young girls might take a look at
http://www.terrifichick.com/

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Pew Center on Global Climate Change
http://www.pewclimate.org/

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The Jalopy Journal (check out the photographs)
http://www.jalopyjournal.com/

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Personal Technology --- I'm a long-time fan of WSJ technology journalist Walt Mossberg’s
He's not a pawn of hardware and software manufacturers.
http://ptech.wsj.com/

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From ZD Tips
Would you like to make one of your Web images look like an old, yellowed photograph? Or perhaps put your face in the middle of a $100 bill? Or make an image look like it’s on fire?

Now you can with a free Web-based service called WebFX. WebFX takes any image on the Web and applies one of several dozen effects to it. The new image appears in your browser, and you can then download it to your hard disk.

WebFX is located at http://cs.sonoma.edu/kendrick/webfx/

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law.com
http://www.law.com/

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We are sponsoring a free seminar, Attain Results with Online Learning, designed to answer your questions regarding Web-based training.
This seminar is popular and space is limited. Register now to reserve your place at http://www.attainlearning.com/seminars.
More information on the seminar and on Macromedia Learning products follows.
Please join us. We look forward to seeing you.
Sincerely,
The Macromedia Attain Team

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Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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January 18, 1999

How many doctoral theses will emerge now that the data and pictures are available?
The Sulabh International Museum of Toilets
http://www.sulabhtoiletmuseum.org/

Some of the featured items are not commodes per se,
They're accounting stools with outboxes.
.

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Sometimes there are issues of a journal that turn out to be especially helpful. This is the case in the January 1999 issue of Syllabus. You should be able to obtain free monthly issues of this journal. You may want to obtain a hard copy of the entire issue, although highlights are available at http://www.syllabus.com/jan99_mag.html

  1. On Page 8, a bulletin is provided announcing the new joint venture of Western governors University (WGU) and Open University. A new online university called Governors Open University will offer competency-based network distributed education to all states and territories of the United States. Some added information about WGU accreditation begins on Page 38. You can read more about these matters at http://www.wgu.edu
  2. Beginning on Page 18 you will find Lawrence Hinman's very easy to read overview of "streaming Video: Adding Real Multimedia to the Web." This is my favorite article in the January 1999 issue. Near the end of the article you should note the discussion about the G2 format.
  3. Beginning on Page 24, Michael Major has a nice article on "Next Generation Internet and Video: Emerging Applications." Especially note the NGI medley of broadband networks that is being built in parallel to the Internet. Applications at various universities are mentioned, including the University of Akron, Virginia Tech, Penn State, and William Patterson University.
  4. Beginning on Page 40, you will find Jeff Stabenau" article on "DVD: The MultiMedium."
  5. It really is important to note what is happening with copyright legislation. An overview is provided by Robert Diotalevi beginning on Page 44 with an article entitled "Copyrighting Cyberspace: Unweaving a Tangled Web." In the U.S., fair use safe harbors for educators survived the Digtal Millennium Copyright Act signed by Bill Clinton on October 28. Previous drafts were bleak for educators than the final version of this bill. Now we must watch for The Digital Era Copyright Enhancement Act, H.T. 3048 that is still tied up in Congress. There are several other bills affecting Fair Use that are noted at the end of the article. You can read about pending legislation and communicate your thoughts at http://incongress.com
    Also see http://thomas.loc.gov
  6. Beginning on Page 48, Sharon Gray provides a short review of collaboration tools.
  7. There are other articles as well.
  8. Syllabus also has a Buyers Guide at http://www.syllabus.com/jan99_BG.html

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Security On Campus, Inc. --- crime and safety statistics on over 500 campuses
http://www.campussafety.org
I did not find a link to Trinity University --- thinks are pretty quiet here.

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From Aaron Konstam,

A library staff member told me about this most amazing web site that might interest some or you.

First the problem it solved. I wanted to order a book that had been published in 1971, had no ISBN number and was out of print. I tried amazon.com and the Powell bookstore in Portland (the nations largest bookstore), with no success.

Well one goes to: http://www.bookfinder.com and I found 5 or 6 bookstores throughout the country that had a copy of this book. I have managed to arrange to purchase 2 copies when before I couldn’t even locate one copy.

Evidently, www.abebooks.com gives similar service. It is a great help for us book people, or is it people of the book.

To Aaron's message I might add the Bitty Blackboard web site that, among science news items, has a science book finder at http://www.ittybittyblackboard.com

To Aaron's message Chris Nolan added the following excellent source for finding books in general:
http://www.trinity.edu/departments/library/books.html

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PedagoNet is a learning resources search engine.
Find leaning resources here.
Consider linking your own materials (it was easy to fill out the form)
PedagoNet - Learning Resources Search Engine
http://www.pedagonet.com

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Everything you may ever want to know about DVD
http://www.dvd.com/

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What letters really sell? (marketing)
http://www.nmoa.org/Museum/letters/lett01.htm

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21st Century Teachers Network
http://www.21ct.org/

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What was on those old 78s?
Canadian Historical Sound Recordings
http://www2.nlc-bnc.ca/gramophone/src/home.htm

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Two Fun Guys and an Accountant (thanks for the tip Dan)
Cheap shots about accountants (there should at least be a moratorium in tax season)
http://www.execpc.com/~thorsten/JOKE.HTML

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Microsoft This Week
http://www.microsoft.com/misc/mstw/

FREE Online Learning CD-ROM for faculty members and IT professionals. (Jensen ordered a copy)
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/online

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International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences
http://www.iadas.net/index.phtml

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The Multi-Cultural Recycler (Make your own cultural compost.)
http://shoko.calarts.edu/~alex/recycler.html

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From the Scout Report

Alternative Press Center
http://www.altpress.org/
Alternative Press Index
http://www.altpress.org/api.html

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From the Scout Report (includes sections on impact of the web on religion and the sociology of religion)

Religious Freedom
http://cti.itc.virginia.edu/~jkh8x/relfree/home.html
Religious Broadcasting
http://cti.itc.virginia.edu/~jkh8x/relbroad/home.html
New Religious Movements
http://cti.itc.virginia.edu/~jkh8x/soc257/

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From the Scout Report

FAIR - Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (with audio)
http://www.fair.org/

FAIR is a media watch group that "seek[s] to invigorate the First Amendment by advocating for greater diversity in the press" and offers critical analysis and commentary on media bias and censorship issues. FAIR’s Website includes selected articles from _Extra!_, the magazine of FAIR; current and archived broadcasts of _CounterSpin_, FAIR’s weekly radio show; current and past editions of Media Beat, a weekly syndicated column on media and politics written by Norman Solomon; a section devoted to Media Activism; and a section called Media Watch Desks, which scrutinizes media from various perspectives. In addition, a section entitled Media Files organizes documents, broadcasts, and Websites by subject to help users locate specific information. FAIR also maintains a mailing list, that provides news, commentary, and action alerts to interested parties

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From the Scout Report

Directory of Corporate Archives in the United States and Canada http://www.hunterinformation.com/corporat.htm

Editors Amy Fischer and Liz Holum Johnson open doorways to the often closed realm of corporate archives in this publication from the Business Archives Section of the Society of American Archivists. _The Directory of Corporate Archives in the United States and Canada_, an ongoing effort, details the nature, location, and accessibility of historical business records for corporate archivists and researchers. Over 200 entries from Anheuser-Busch and Blockbuster Entertainment to the William Wrigley Jr. Co. are listed by company name, geographical location, or name of archivist, and complete contact information, conditions of access, and physical description of materials are provided when available

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From the Scout Report (Jensen's been preaching to you about registering your accounting classes here --- go for it.)

Accounting Coursepage Exchange
http://www.rutgers.edu/Accounting/raw/aaa/ace/index.htm

The Accounting Coursepage Exchange (ACE) is a new database of Accounting coursepages and syllabi presented by the American Accounting Association. All educational material is searchable by title, institutional affiliation, textbook, or instructor, among other criteria, and interested parties may add their own coursepage on-site

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From the Scout Report (Jensen highlighted this link in the last edition of his bookmarks)

EdgarScan [Excel]
http://bamboo.tc.pw.com/

Developed at the PricewaterhouseCoopers Technology Centre, EdgarScan helps company researchers effectively sort through the mass of quarterly (10-Q) and annual filings (10-ks) housed at the SEC EDGAR Database (reviewed in the February 9, 1996 Scout Report). Filings and initial public offerings may be searched by company name or industry code, and search results are listed in an easy-to-read format with hypertext table and Excel spreadsheet output possibilities.

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Worldly Investor
http://www.worldlyinvestor.com

Wall $treet Week With Louis Rukeyser - audio and video clips
http://www.pbs.org/mpt/rukeyser/

 

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Western History Photos
http://gowest.coalliance.org

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Toxic chemicals in your food
http://www.foodnews.org

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ParkBench Streaming Video
http://www.cat.nyu.edu/parkbench

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Only the names are changed to protect the stupid
http://www.mcsweeneys.net

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Are you getting greeting cards by email that you cannot read on your computer? Go to
http://multimedia.aol.com/external/postcard.htm

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Making learning fun for children of all ages
http://www.animabets.com

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 Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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Bob Jensen's Index Page Bob Jensen's Bookmarks New Bookmark Archives

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January 11, 1999

I was recently asked where to find a summary of online current issues in accounting.    One way to follow current issues is to subscribe to the lists at  http://pacioli.loyola.edu./

Probably the best table of links to current world issues in accounting is the green table at the bottom of http://caarnet.ntu.edu.sg/cn/people/rogerd/teaching.htm
Thank you for that little green table Roger Debreceny.

The top links for current issues in accounting include the following:

http://caarnet.ntu.edu.sg/cn/ian/index.htm

http://www.csu.edu.au/anet/lists/ADBLE-L

http://www.iasc.org.uk

Reply from Roger:
Bob mentioned my regular (well, OK, not as regular as I would like!) newsletter .. John and Jenny at ANet have rationalised the ANet lists .. Double Entries is now only coming out on ANews-L .. ADBLE-L has been wound up .. the URLs shown below:

http://www.csu.edu.au/anet/lists/ADBLE-L

should be replaced by

http://www.csu.edu.au/ANet/lists/ANEWS-L/

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Bob:

I have started a new web site index for teaching materials in the financial reporting area. The site is at http://www.cob.ohio-state.edu/~tomassin/finrepon/ .. Please forward this message to your colleagues so that they may refer to the materials.

Happy new year!
Larry Tomassini [ tomassin@cob.ohio-state.edu ]

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AccountingNet's URL is at
http://www.accountingnet.com

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EXCEL 2000 Spreadsheets on the Internet
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/confidential

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Frontpage 2000 Beta
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine/jan1999/fp2k/fp2k.htm

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MS 2000 Guide
http://www.microsoft.com/magazine

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Richard Campbell recommends the Microsoft web site at http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/nts/downloads/recommended/mediaserv

The Windows Media tools provide a powerful, easy-to-use set of authoring and encoding tools for producing live and on-demand streaming media content. The Windows Media tools may be installed on computers running Windows 95, Windows 98, or Windows NT Server 4.0 with either Service Pack 3 or Service Pack 4. The Windows Media tools download includes:

NetShow Encoder
NetShow TAG Author
NetShow Plug-in for Adobe Premiere
NetShow ASF Indexer
NetShow Presenter and Publish to ASF
PowerPoint add-ins
VidToASF and WavToASF conversion tools
Codecs for creating Windows Media Technologies content.  

The SDK allows developers to write new tools or extend existing applications to work with NetShow Services or ASF.   To play streaming media content (including ASF content), you need the Windows Player. You can download this free from a link given at the bottom of the page at http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/nts/downloads/recommended/mediaserv

I would have included the Windows Player link, but the URL is about as long as this entire message.  Go to the bottom of the above link for the free download of Windows Player.

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RealPlayer is still trying, but it is tough to compete when Microsoft makes the above software free
http://www.real.com/products/playerplus/upgrading.html?src=q4_1201_freesub
Seems like I recall that somebody named John Davison Rockefeller would sell Standard Oil products below his cost until all the competition left town.  Then monopoly prices went up.  There are "Gates" to  reincarnation.

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From Movable Type to Data Deluge
http://www.worldandi.com/article/ssjan99.htm

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The first Smithsonian exhibit created for the Internet
http://www.si.edu/organiza/museums/ripley/eap/rt

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American Museum of Photography
http://www.photographymuseum.com
Photographs of a NY Cabbie
http://www.nycabbie.com

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RAND Corporation's research reports are now online --- WOW!

http://www.rand.org/PUBS/index.html

RAND has a long history of research on issues relating to the national security and public welfare of the United States, and it publishes the results of this research to serve the public interest. Its work involves most of the major disciplines in the physical, social, and biological sciences, with emphasis on their applications to problems of policy and planning in domestic and foreign affairs.

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Dear Dr. Jensen,

I am writing to tell you of our comprehensive on-line tutorial software,
SCOTTS (http://www.scottnet.com/present_welcome.htm), from our homepage
http://www.scottnet.com/

We would be grateful for any observations you might wish to share with us privately to improve the beta-version of this product.
Sincerely,
Joseph L. Scott, Ph.D.,
President, Scott Supply Service, Inc.
<mailto:scott4me@ix.netcom.com>

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 Microsoft's Terra Server
http://www.terraserver.microsoft.com

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Reviews of Version 2 of Macromedia Dreamweaver
http://www.macromedia.com/software/dreamweaver/reviews/reviews

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Microsoft's Quickstart (including a tutorial on how to create a virtual class)
http://www.microsoft.com/education/hed/online/qukstart.htm

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It is not new, but you may want to check out GTE's BigBook of yellow pages and other guides
http://www.bigbook.com

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Please add this to your bookmarks on creative writing
A Journal For Teachers of Writing in Webbed Environments
http://english.ttu.edu/kairos

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The Better Business Bureau has a great web site
http://www.bbb.org

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Online dictionary and thesaurus
http://www.voycabulary.com

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Multimedia headstones --- you can leave something behind
http://www.leif.com

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High School Students' Physics of Just About Everything
http://www.kent.wednet.edu/staff/trobinso/physicspages/PhysicsOf.html

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Bad Fads Museum
http://www.adscape.com/badfads

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Online Surgery
http://www.onlinesurgery.com

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It is a good thing that my students do not publish their school diaries. Some of the adjectives would not be in the dictionary.
A Yahoo Pick of the Year for 1998 --- Diaries of Second Grade Students
http://twinlakes.k12.in.us/schools/elem/el/mrgall/diary/diary.html

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Mark Twain at Large
http://library.berkeley.edu/BANC/Exhibits/MTP

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INFOBITS is an electronic service of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Center for Instructional Technology. Each month the CIT’s Information Resources Consultant monitors and selects from a number of information technology and instructional technology sources that come to her attention and provides brief notes for electronic dissemination to educators.

SHNEIDERMAN ON INFORMATION VISUALIZATION

The School of Information and Library Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill recently sponsored a public lecture, "The Eyes Have It: User Interfaces for Information Visualization," by Dr. Ben Shneiderman of the Department of Computer Science, Human-Computer-Interaction Laboratory (HCIL) at the University of Maryland. Shneiderman discussed the way in which human perceptual skills are currently underutilized by human-computer graphical user interfaces (GUIs) and what the future holds for this area. He presented his "Information Seeking Mantra": overview first (give the user the big picture), zoom and filter (allow the user to pinpoint area of interest and screen out extraneous information), then details-on-demand (provide more detailed data only when the user requests it). Shneiderman argues for more sophisticated information visualization interfaces which will enable users to comprehend and navigate through "information-abundant" Web sites without being overwhelmed by the vast quantities of data.

Shneiderman is author and editor of several books on user interface design, including DESIGNING THE USER INTERFACE: STRATEGIES FOR EFFECTIVE HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION [3rd edition,  Addison-Wesley, 1997, ISBN: 0201694972, http://www.aw.com/DTUI/] and

SPARKS OF INNOVATION IN HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION [Ablex, 1993, ISBN: 1-56750-078-1, http://www.cs.umd.edu/projects/hcil/pubs/books/sparks-of-innovation.html]. He is a co-author of the forthcoming book, READINGS IN INFORMATION VISUALIZATION: USING VISION TO THINK, to be published January 1999 [Morgan Kaufman Publishers, 1999, ISBN: 1558605339].

For more information on Dr. Shneiderman and links to online copies of his recent papers: http://www.cs.umd.edu/~ben

Here are some of the Web resources that Shneiderman cited in his presentation:

The LUCID (Logical User Centered Interaction Design) Framework
a methodology framework for managing the design and testing of the
software user interface
http://www.cognetics.com/lucid/

Sun Microsystems "Guide to Web Style"
http://www.sun.com/styleguide/

Spotfire --- a supplier of data exploration and collaborative discovery solutions to the pharmaceutical, specialty chemical and biotechnology industries with the ability to immediately display large amounts of disparate data and to visually query that information for trends, anomalies, outliers and patterns
http://www.spotfire.com/

WestLaw Case Explorer Visualizing Legal Information http://www.cs.umd.edu/hcil/west-legal/ See especially the Dotfire prototype: http://www.cs.umd.edu/hcil/west-legal/dotfire/west.html

The current work of the University of Maryland Human-Computer-Interaction Laboratory includes "information visualization, interfaces for digital libraries, multimedia resources for learning communities, zooming user interfaces (ZUIs), technology design methods with and for children, and instruments for evaluating user interface technologies." For more information on HCIL and its projects link to http://www.cs.umd.edu/projects/hcil/

Many providers of online databases offer short-term free trial periods to attract new users to their subscription services. In "Review of Online Information 98" (in FREE PINT, No. 28, December 17, 1998), Dr. Anne L. Barker lists some of the database vendors offering free short-term access to their fee-based services. Included are Derwent’s Drug File and World Drug Alerts, BIOSIS (biological data), H. W. Wilson Company’s bibliographic databases, and Ovid Technologies (bibliographic, scientific, technical, and medical databases).

The article is available on the Web at
http://www.freepint.co.uk/issues/171298.htm#tips

Free Pint [ISSN 1460-7239] is published every two weeks in the U.K. by the information consultant Willco and is sent free of charge to subscribers via email. Articles written by information professionals tell where to find reliable Web sites and how to search effectively.

Subscription information and back issues are available on the Web at
http://www.freepint.co.uk/

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 Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-736-7347 Fax: 210-736-8134  Email:  rjensen@trinity.edu

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